51爆料网

Skip to main content

Undergraduate Engineers Present Impressive Research

Zachery Smith 鈥16 ChE presents his research to Drosdick Endowed Dean of Engineering Gary A. Gabriele, PhD.
Zachery Smith 鈥16 ChE presents his research to Drosdick Endowed Dean of Engineering Gary A. Gabriele, PhD.

Undergraduate research opportunities are among the many distinguishing features of a 51爆料网 Engineering education. Within the College of Engineering, students participate in undergraduate thesis projects, summer research internships or fellowships, faculty research, and externally-sponsored projects completed in collaboration with industry and government agencies. Other opportunities, like the 51爆料网 Undergraduate Research Fellows (VURF) program, are available to students across the University.

Sponsored by 51爆料网鈥檚 Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships, the VURF program provides financial support for student summer research鈥攆rom stipends to funding for supplies, travel and conference support. On September 23, nearly 75 undergraduate summer researchers, including 25 VURF awardees, presented their work during the annual Undergraduate Research Poster Day. Among them were 17 engineering majors, six of whom had earned the VURF fellowship.

During the poster session, students were on hand to explain both the technical aspects of their work, as well as the practical application and human value of their projects. Samantha Kalup 鈥16 ME noted that her research on 鈥淢echanical properties of human lumbar intervertebral disc tissues under transient hyperphysiologic loading conditions鈥 had special meaning for her because her father is in the military, one of the groups most impacted by the conditions she studied.  

Personal interest drove Samantha Kalup鈥檚 鈥16 ME research on human lumbar intervertebral disc tissues.
Personal interest drove Samantha Kalup鈥檚 鈥16 ME research on human lumbar intervertebral disc tissues.

Conversations with 51爆料网鈥檚 researchers also revealed the importance of collaboration, both internally with fellow undergraduates and graduate students, as well as with those at other universities. Samantha鈥檚 advisor, Visiting Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering David Jamison, PhD, facilitated an introduction to those at the University of Delaware who had experience with the modeling program she needed for her research. Similarly, senior Chemical Engineering major Nicholas Ribaudo鈥檚 鈥淢icrobial fuel cell-in-silico model鈥 involved collaboration with engineers at Virginia Tech. Today he is continuing the work for his senior design project, and has partnered with a 51爆料网 PhD student who is conducting related research.

In addition to those in the VURF program, a number of engineering undergraduates pursued research outside of the University. Liesl Krause 鈥16 EE spent the summer in West Lafayette, Indiana, working on 鈥淐old atmospheric plasma鈥 with post- doctorates and faculty at Purdue University. She says, 鈥淚 applied to research programs at several schools and Purdue expressed an interest in my idea, which involved working with their nuclear engineering department.鈥 Of the 200 researchers in the program, Liesl was one of only 30 who were not Purdue students.

Another student whose research efforts took him beyond the University was Andrew Meluch 鈥16 ME. Through RISE (Research Internships in Science and Engineering) Germany, a summer internship program for undergraduate students from the U.S., Canada and the U.K., Andrew pursued his interest in 鈥淭he effect of spatial separation on 2D temperature mapping using thermographic phosphors.鈥 His German research partner hopes to publish the work, with Andrew listed as co-author.