Research

  • Vanderbilt University

    Rescue Robot one of scores of senior innovations at Design Day

    Colin Roper adjusts the six-legged crawling rescue robot he and a team of fellow engineering seniors developed for the Vanderbilt Center for Intelligent Mechatronics as their senior design project. The team joined hundreds of Vanderbilt engineering seniors soon to graduate, who demonstrated their readiness to tackle real-world engineering problems by… Read More

    Apr. 29, 2007

  • Vanderbilt University

    Mobile pollution sensors to be developed at Vanderbilt using Microsoft grant

    Vanderbilt engineers have won an award from Microsoft Corp. to develop a real-time, online, detailed and accurate picture of air quality in large metropolitan areas like Nashville. The mobile air quality monitoring system will make it possible to monitor air quality more accurately than the current system of fixed stations… Read More

    Apr. 14, 2007

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt engineer wins NSF award for innovative Internet system

    Professor Yi Cui has gotten recognition – and funding – for his novel idea that could give YouTube a run for its money. The Vanderbilt assistant professor of computer science and computer engineering has won a prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER Award for his research into peer-to-peer networking to enable… Read More

    Mar. 7, 2007

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt Engineering in Science Watch Top Ten

    Vanderbilt University School of Engineering is ranked in the top ten universities nationally as measured by the impact that their publications have had on the field. The rankings were published in the January/February issue of Thomson Scientific’s newsletter Science Watch and are based on a survey of research publications in… Read More

    Feb. 24, 2007

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt research targets chemical and biological weapon detection

    Vanderbilt University researchers, in conjunction with colleagues at several other institutions, are working on a project that promises significant improvement in the control of proteins for a number of uses, including the detection of chemical and biological weapons. Real-time control of the function of single proteins by detecting and changing… Read More

    Feb. 11, 2007

  • Vanderbilt University

    Cummings appointed principal scientist of Oak Ridge National Laboratory division

    A chemical engineering professor at Vanderbilt University will lead the science programs of an Oak Ridge National Laboratory center that is designing and developing next-generation nanoscale materials. As the principal scientist for the ORNL Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, Peter T. Cummings will continue to serve as Vanderbilt University John… Read More

    Jan. 22, 2007

  • Vanderbilt University

    Software innovator Tuinenga joins Vanderbilt Space and Defense Institute

    Electronic industry entrepreneur Paul Tuinenga has joined Vanderbilt University as principal staff engineer and program manager for software development for the Institute for Space and Defense Electronics. Tuinenga, who co-founded MicroSim Corporation and Avista Design Systems, is known throughout the electronics industry for his contributions to electronic design automation and… Read More

    Jan. 9, 2007

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt Engineering to join new national cyber-security initiative

    Terrorist attacks in cyberspace have been the subjects of science fiction and spy novels and movies, but engineering researchers at Vanderbilt will help make sure that reality never catches up with fiction. The Vanderbilt School of Engineering is joining the University of Memphis Center for Information Assurance and Sparta, Inc. Read More

    Dec. 6, 2006

  • Vanderbilt University

    National nuclear waste issues to be tackled by Vanderbilt-led multi-university team

    Nuclear power might be “green power,” but only if the nuclear waste is managed properly. Vanderbilt is leading a multi-university consortium of engineers and scientists who have learned a lot during the last ten years about how to handle nuclear waste. By helping the nation through the U.S. Department of… Read More

    Dec. 6, 2006

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt Engineering to lead FAA helicopter reliability project

    All it took to rip the roof off Aloha Airlines Flight 243 in 1988 was the gradual corrosion around rivet holes that had, over time, created tiny cracks in the Boeing 737’s fuselage that suddenly combined with fatal results. That incident, which caused one death, 65 injuries and a traumatic… Read More

    Nov. 1, 2006