search

UMD    AML





Associate Professor Hugh Bruck

Associate Professor Hugh Bruck

 

NSF Program Boosts Nanotech Curriculum

Associate Professor Hugh Bruck, Department of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) Lab Coordinator Robert Bonenberger, MSE Professor and Chair Robert M. Briber, Dr. Jaime Cardena-Garcia, and MSE Associate Professor Luz Martinez-Miranda recently completed work on an NSF-funded project titled "Development of Educational Materials and Acquisition of Equipment for a Nanoscale to Microscale Engineering Laboratory." The project, supported by the NSF?s Course, Curriculum and Laboratory Improvement (CCLI) program, was used to develop new laboratory experiments that effectively engage undergraduate engineering students in the scientific processes and exploration of concepts in nanotechnology. Work funded under the proposal also helped integrate significant advances in nanotechnology research with the undergraduate engineering laboratory curriculum through the development of a new teaching lab.

Two significant experimental systems were assembled to give students an enhanced laboratory experience. The first is a pair of micro-tensile testers used for determining the mechanical properties of micron-scale devices and materials. The second is an integrated nanoindentation / scanning probe microscope (SPM) testing system, used for measuring the hardness and elasticity of materials at the nanoscale, and for imaging samples.

The equipment forms the core of the new Modern Engineering Materials Instructional Laboratory (MEMIL). Located in the Jeong H. Kim Engineering Building, the 2241 square-foot facility serves as a shared undergraduate lab for materials testing and characterization and is used to accommodate the needs of multiple departments within the Clark School. The award was for $150,000, matched by the A. James Clark School of Engineering.

Bruck's junior-level ENME 382: Engineering Materials and Manufacturing Processes class was one of those that benefited from the new equipment and curriculum.

Bio-Inspired Engineering Curriculum Featured in IOP Journal

"Training Mechanical Engineering Students to Utilize Biological Inspiration During Product Development," a paper co-authored by Associate Professor Hugh Bruck, Associate Professor Satyandra K. Gupta, Emeritus Professor Edward Magrab, Alan L. Gershon, Ira Golden, Lawrence S. Gyger, Jr., and Brent W. Spranklin was posted in the Institute of Physics Publishing journal Bioinspiration & Biomimetics in October.

The paper describes educational tools currently included in several undergraduate courses at Maryland, including ENME 489L: Product Development Using Bio-Inspired Concepts, facilitated by a process the authors developed called Concurrent Fabrication and Assembly that allow students to design and manufacture bio-inspired robots. Educational modules highlighted in the paper are used in a number of courses available to undergraduate students. The research was funded by an award from the National Science Foundation for the amount of $401,000.

The paper will be featured in the December 2007 print version of Bioinspiration & Biomimetics and currently appears free in the online edition at www.iop.org (pdf, 12 pages, 1.56M).

January 4, 2008


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Search Open for Full-Time Faculty Positions in Mechanical Engineering

Maryland Engineers Take On Big Challenges in Medicine

CEEE Study Explores How AI Can Reduce HVAC Energy Consumption

Justin Di Palo: Advancing Sustainable Living

Colton Honored with Microfluidics on Glass Award

How Much Wood Could a Heat Pump Dry?

Jump Start Program Gives CEEE Grad Students a Boost

UMD to Host International Graduate Engineering Course on Sustainability

State-of-the-Art 3D Nanoprinter Now at UMD

Das Named Pioneering Researcher by Chemical Communications

 
 
Back to top  
AML Home Clark School Home UMD Home ENME Home