2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Grad student wins first place in DOE fuel cycle research competition

    Lyndsey Morgan Fyffe, a doctoral student in environmental engineering, has been awarded a first place prize in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Innovations in Fuel Cycle Research Awards competition. Fyffe Fyffe’s award is in the category of energy policy, and her award-winning research paper, “Developing Operational Safety Performance Measures for… Read More

    Jul. 15, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Engineering shares Vanderbilt space at Nashville Entrepreneur Center

    Vanderbilt now has designated space at the Nashville Entrepreneur Center’s new downtown incubator at 41 Peabody Street in the city’s historic Rolling Mill Hill area. Dedicated Vanderbilt space at the EC. The VU@EC program was developed in conjunction with the School of Engineering and the Center for Technology Transfer &… Read More

    Jul. 10, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Krahn receives U.S. academy’s environmental engineering certification

    Steven L. Krahn, professor of the practice of nuclear environmental engineering, has been accepted by eminence into the American Academy of Environmental Engineers and Scientists as a Board Certified Environmental Engineering Member in the specialty practice of hazardous waste management. Krahn Krahn performs research in the technologies associated with the… Read More

    Jul. 9, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    BME-powered startup wins first place in Memphis tech event

    BioNanovations, a startup company based on technology developed at Vanderbilt, claimed first place at the NewME Accelerator PopUp event held in Memphis June 28-30. Bell According to The Daily News in Memphis, the company was awarded prizes worth $45,000 and earned a seat in the 12-week NewME Accelerator program in… Read More

    Jul. 9, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Galloway is president of the American Society for Engineering Education

    Kenneth F. Galloway accepts the ASEE gavel from Walter Buchanan, immediate past president of the ASEE. Kenneth F. Galloway assumed the presidency of the American Society for Engineering Education at a gala event June 26 at the conclusion of the ASEE’s 2013 annual conference. “The work of… Read More

    Jul. 8, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Three engineering grads named to university’s alumni board

    Cox Three of seven new members of the Vanderbilt University Alumni Association Board are alumni of the School of Engineering. They were unanimously approved during the board’s April 12 meeting for three-year terms that began July 1, 2013. The engineering alumni taking seats on the board are: Cathy Cox, BE’95,… Read More

    Jul. 3, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    School announces new department chairs, associate deans, five faculty appointments

    Adams The School of Engineering has announced the appointments of two department chairs, two associate deans, and five new faculty members. The appointments are effective July 1, 2013. Douglas Adams has been named Distinguished Professor and chair of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Adams comes to Vanderbilt from… Read More

    Jul. 1, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Professor helps validate maps of the brain’s resting state

    Kick back and shut your eyes. Now stop thinking. You have just put your brain into what neuroscientists call its resting state. What the brain is doing when an individual is not focused on the outside world has become the focus of considerable research in recent years. One of the… Read More

    Jun. 19, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Engineering’s Cummings receives Prausnitz Award

    Peter T. Cummings, John R. Hall Professor of Chemical Engineering, has been awarded the 2013 John M. Prausnitz Award by the Conference on Properties and Phase Equilibria for Product and Process Design. Peter Cummings The award, which was presented May 30 in Argentina at an Iryapu jungle conference center near… Read More

    Jun. 17, 2013

  • Vanderbilt University

    Genetics may have played a role in student’s cancer research grant award

    In July, Alex Walsh will step up to a podium in Saarbrucken, Germany and deliver a talk on optical metabolic imaging at an international workshop on Advanced Multiphoton and Fluorescence Lifetime Techniques. It’s her prize for winning this year’s JenLab Young Investigator Award – one of several… Read More

    Jun. 14, 2013