April 6, 2020

Smart HVAC systems save big money

Residential buildings account for 20% of total energy consumption in the United States. If these homes were retrofitted with smart systems, which only condition the air if people are present, we would save 24-42% of these energy costs. David Warsinger published this research in the Journal of Building Engineering.
April 1, 2020

Andres Arrieta receives CAREER award from NSF

Andres Arrieta has received the CAREER award from the National Science Foundation, their most prestigious award in support of early-career faculty. His project is "The Mechanics of Hierarchically Multistable Metastructures."
February 28, 2020

Turbomachine expander offers efficient and safe heating and cooling

PhD student Riley Barta has developed a turbomachine expander that helps harvest previously wasted energy used in the process of moving air from high to low pressure. The device can be used as a control agent within existing heat pumps. Purdue is world-renowned in research of refrigeration and compressors.
February 24, 2020

Why coronavirus spread so fast on a cruise ship

Prof. Yan Chen studies how airborne viruses spread in enclosed environments like airplanes and cruise ships. Keeping coronavirus patients on board a cruise ship is the worst thing they could have done, because a cruise ship's HVAC system can't filter out the virus, and may end up spreading it even more.
January 24, 2020

Shirley Dyke discusses space habitats in Civil Engineering magazine

Future long-term habitats on the Moon or Mars will have to be resilient against many hazards, including radiation, sandstorms, quakes, and meteorites. Prof. Shirley Dyke is the director of the Resilient Extra Terrestrial Habitats Institute (RETHi), a NASA-funded institute researching how to make these habitats resilient, self-monitoring, and serviceable autonomously. She discusses these challenges in the latest issue of Civil Engineering magazine.
December 6, 2019

Patricia Davies receives Violet Haas Award

Patricia Davies has received the Violet Haas Award, recognizing people who have facilitated the advancement of women in hiring, promotion, education and salary, or have enhanced a positive professional climate for women at the University
November 1, 2019

Seeing inside explosions with high speed X-rays

Purdue University engineers have studied energetic materials (explosives, propellants and pyrotechnics) for many years. Now, for the first time ever, they have used high speed x-rays to look inside these energetic materials during an actual explosion, to determine exactly what causes them to react. This collaboration involves Herrick Labs, Zucrow Labs, and Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois.
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