News

February 18, 2020

Ali Argon (1930-2019)

Ali Argon (BSME 1952), a world-leading expert in the mechanics of materials, has passed away.
February 13, 2020

Bumsoo Han builds a pancreatic cancer 'time machine'

Pancreatic cancer has one of the worst survival rates for patients. Going back in time to observe how cells with key gene mutations interact would help researchers better understand how the cancer starts and identify it sooner. Prof. Bumsoo Han created an artificial pancreatic duct, where he can simulate a pancreatic cancer "time machine." His research has revealed that the disease is even more unpredictable than previously thought: Cancer cells promote each other’s invasiveness when they grow together.
February 10, 2020

From Indiana to Scotland: A Purdue Alumna Reflects

At Purdue, Kat Frangos (BSME '14) helped to design a wheelchair with an integrated walker. Now she's in Scotland, working on her Master's in Sustainable Energy Systems. Read more about how Purdue helped Kat to develop those problem-solving skills.
February 7, 2020

Congratulations to our Distinguished Professors

Purdue University's Board of Trustees have ratified three distinguished faculty positions in Mechanical Engineering. Ajay Malshe is now the R. Eugene and Susie E. Goodson Distinguished Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Karthik Ramani is now the Donald W. Feddersen Distinguished Professor in Mechanical Engineering. Yung Shin is now the Donald A. and Nancy G. Roach Distinguished Professor of Advanced Manufacturing. They also approved a posthumous degree for Trever Col, who died in November 2019.
February 6, 2020

We're on LinkedIn!

Purdue University Mechanical Engineering now has a group on LinkedIn! We invite all alumni, students, parents, faculty, staff, industry partners, donors, and friends of Purdue ME to join the group.
February 5, 2020

Portable device detects E.coli with optics

Euiwon Bae has developed a portable Bluetooth device that can detect E. coli in food samples, using a silicon photomultiplier to detect the pathogen's bioluminescent signature.
January 27, 2020

Designing cells that follow the leader

Like a tiger stalking its prey by smell, cells move by following chemical trails (a process called chemotaxis). Jong Hyun Choi, associate professor of mechanical engineering, has created synthetic cells that mimic these two behaviors: sensing a chemical, and then moving to follow it.
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.
January 21, 2020

How do engineers clean makeup brushes?

Envie is a makeup brush cleaning device which automatically washes, rinses, and dries multiple makeup brushes in just seven minutes, rather than hours spent laboring over a sink. Developed by a predominantly female team of Purdue University students, Envie was awarded 1st place among all capstone projects in Mechanical Engineering.
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