News

  • Vanderbilt University

    Maker class adapts to COVID-19, innovates at the Wond’ry

    In the COVID-19 era, finding creative ways to solve problems has become more important than ever, especially when it comes to hands-on learning. The director of making at the Wond’ry, Vanderbilt’s Innovation Center, has adjusted his class on engineering and immersive design to help students create… Read More

    Oct. 26, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Team examines operating limits in solid-state batteries to improve driving range of electric vehicles

    There is huge momentum toward adoption of battery electric vehicles primarily because performances are meeting or exceeding the properties of traditional automobiles. Consumers want electric vehicles that have similar driving range (energy density) and charging styles and times (power density) to gasoline powered vehicles. Kelsey Hatzell “One pathway to… Read More

    Oct. 22, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Climate adaptation is a necessity and no longer an option

    This opinion piece by Civil and Environmental Engineering Professor Mark Abkowitz originally appeared in The Hill, an American news website based in Washington, D.C. focused on politics, policy, business and international relations. Professor Abkowitz chairs a National Academy of Sciences… Read More

    Oct. 19, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Team receives $4 million NIH grant for rapid test of COVID-19, other respiratory infections

    A test being developed by Vanderbilt researchers identifies COVID and other respiratory illnesses without having to wait for lab results. Photo: Meharry Medical College, August 2020 Twice in 2019, Nick Adams and his colleagues applied for federal grant money to develop a rapid, precise, in-office test for respiratory infections. This… Read More

    Oct. 13, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Student team takes top honors in data science challenge

    One of the team’s visualization showed popular intersections. Using data sets that included population, commuter traffic, air quality and other measures of downtown Chicago, a team of graduate and undergraduate students recently took the top spot in a challenge organized by Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Urban data analytics was one… Read More

    Oct. 13, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    BME student’s new sci-fi novel, written pre-COVID-19, imagines life in an epidemic

    Vanderbilt first-year student Morgan Butts was raised with a belief that having the “it” factor means far more than a popularity contest. For Butts, “it” stands for “independent thought.” The biomedical engineering major used this idea as a launching point for her newly published science fiction… Read More

    Oct. 12, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Audrey Bowden is 2021 Fellow of The Optical Society

    Audrey Ellerbee Bowden has been elected as a 2021 Fellow Member of The Optical Society for outstanding achievements in the development of optical devices, image processing algorithms and systems for biomedicine. Audrey Bowden Bowden, associate professor of biomedical engineering, has developed several new system designs that advance optical coherence tomography,… Read More

    Oct. 8, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Lin wins prestigious Paul L. Busch Award for innovative water research

    Shihong Lin, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Vanderbilt University, has won the 2020 Paul L. Busch Award from The Water Research Foundation for his leadership in developing innovative water separation techniques. Since 2001, the award has provided more than $1.9 million in funding to… Read More

    Oct. 7, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Engineering Associate Dean Chris Rowe receives K.C. Potter service award

    Chris Rowe, School of Engineering associate dean for external relations, has received the 2019-2020 K.C. Potter Outstanding Service to Students Award, which is given to a faculty member who provides outstanding service consistently to individual students or student groups through personal advising, development of programs, or improvements to university systems… Read More

    Oct. 6, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Team’s sustained work in T-cell immune response awarded P01 grant totaling $11 million

    For more than a decade Matt Lang and collaborators across the U.S. have worked to recreate key components of T-cells and how they know when to start fighting disease. Conventional wisdom suggested that T-cells formed regular, force-free bonds with infected cells, and in doing so caused the chain reaction of… Read More

    Oct. 4, 2020