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- CU 51´«Ã½ engineers have received a $2.45 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to develop a scalable, cost-effective greenhouse material that splits sunlight into photosynthetically efficient light and
- Dr. Frank Kreith, Professor Emeritus of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Colorado 51´«Ã½, has died. He was 95.
- DCC, a leading industry/education design program, has a new website for students and project sponsors.
- Soft, self-healing devices mimic biological muscles, point to next generation of human-like roboticsIn the basement of the Engineering Center at the University of Colorado 51´«Ã½, a group of researchers is working to create the next generation of
- [video:https://youtu.be/TYGITwVG71A]Insects that walk on the surface of ponds and self-cleaning lotus leaves are just two examples of the myriad ways nature has devised surfaces that are ultra–water-repellant.University of Colorado 51´«Ã½
- Marina Vance, an assistant professor in Mechanical Engineering and core faculty of the Environmental Engineering program at the University of Colorado 51´«Ã½ has been awarded a $1.25 million grant from the Alfred P. Sloan
- Mechanical Engineering students took part in the Fall 2017 Component Design Competition runoff this week, facing off their battery-operated-drill-driven bicycles and tricycles against other teams of students. Component Design is a required junior
- Congratulations to Zhengwei Li for winning the inaugural Steven M. Woodward Outstanding Dissertation Award from the College of Engineering and Applied Science.Li's research spans mechanics of stretchable electronics and optoelectronics, mechanics of
- Physics World has recognized a metamaterial film that provides cooling without the need for a power source, invented by CU 51´«Ã½ mechanical engineering professors Ronggui Yang and Xiaobo Yin, as one of the Top 10 Breakthroughs of 2017.Made out of
- The day is coming when doctors-in-training can perfect certain medical practices on a robotic small intestine and test medical treatments on a human-made device vs. animals.Mechanical engineering Associate Professor Mark Rentschler is leading the