Vuitadmin
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Selected Awards
Faculty members have received NSF CAREER Awards, endowed professorships and other honors. Read MoreOct. 1, 2020
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Targeting chronic pain
A team of Vanderbilt engineers, clinicians and imaging scientists is developing a focused ultrasound neuromodulation device as a non-invasive and non-addictive method for treating chronic pain. The device will look like an MRI head coil and combine functional MRI with ultrasound neuromodulation. The combination will allow researchers to simultaneously alter neuronal… Read MoreOct. 1, 2020
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Convergent thinking is our CIVIC duty
Drawing on real-world data to provide solutions to the challenges cities face has never been more important. Read MoreOct. 1, 2020
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Microtransit with major impact
Two federal grants, $2.1 million from the NSF and $1.8 million from the DOE, are enabling engineers to reimagine how regional transit systems operate, making them more accessible and efficient. Both projects, headed by Abhishek Dubey, assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science, are with the Chattanooga Area Regional… Read MoreOct. 1, 2020
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Self-sealing technology corrects for pore size
Membrane desalination is an efficient way to desalinate water but maintaining uniformity of the pore size is a challenge. A single “large” hole can cause high leakage, compromise membrane performance and contaminate the water. How do you drill trillions of holes between the size of 0.3 and 0.6 nanometers over… Read MoreOct. 1, 2020
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Team achieves solute-solute separation with sub-Angstrom precision
A research team that includes Vanderbilt engineers is the first to successfully separate two ions with minute small size differences, a major advancement in separation science with widespread potential application. Their process is first to achieve solute-solute separation with sub-Angstrom precision. An Angstrom is one hundred-millionth of a centimeter, or… Read MoreOct. 1, 2020
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Shaping materials at the atomic scale
NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY An introduction to membrane nanoscience by Peifu Cheng, postdoctoral scholar, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Membrane research has significantly benefited from nanotechnology, and many sectors of the global ecosystem have benefited from membrane research. Water treatment or desalination is one example. Membranes with nanoscale pores also are… Read MoreOct. 1, 2020
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Vanderbilt wearable exosuit that lessens back muscle fatigue could redesign the future of work
Vanderbilt University engineers have determined that their back-assist exosuit, a clothing-like device that supports human movement and posture, can reduce fatigue by an average of 29–47 percent in lower back muscles. The exosuit’s functionality presents a promising new development for individuals who work in physically demanding fields and are… Read MoreSep. 30, 2020
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ASCE chapter’s Ashley Smith receives inaugural Richard H. Nettleton Outstanding Practitioner Advisor Award
The practitioner advisor to the School of Engineering’s chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers is the recipient of the inaugural Richard H. Nettleton Outstanding Practitioner Advisor Award. Ashley Smith Ashley T. Smith is the first recipient of the Nettleton award for outstanding advisors throughout ASCE nationally and internationally. Read MoreSep. 23, 2020
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Vanderbilt computer scientists awarded NSF grant to restructure research’s road to the public
Vanderbilt researchers have been awarded a National Science Foundation Convergence Accelerator 2020 Cohort Phase 1 grant to create a standardized platform that will streamline the development, testing and dissemination of technology that can improve human health. The nine-month project, “Scalable, Traceable AI for Imaging Translation: Innovation to Implementation for… Read MoreSep. 22, 2020