Print

Print


If you are having problems viewing this message, click here.


For the week of April 30th, 2010

@COE and the Career Services @COE will be published on a bi-weekly  
basis beginning May 7. Please note that due to technical difficulties,  
the Career Services @COE for this week will be published on Monday,  
May 3.

Please send your submissions for @COE to Kim Cowart in the Engineering  
Communications Office at [log in to unmask] by noon on Thursdays.



COE News

Outstanding COE Faculty and Staff are Honored at Awards Dinner

The University of Tennessee College of Engineering held its annual  
Faculty and Staff Awards Dinner on Thursday, April 22 at the Knoxville  
Convention Center.

The highlight of the evening was the presentation of the Nathan W.  
Dougherty Award to Dr. John Prados, professor emeritus in the  
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. In the photo, Dr.  
Prados (center) is joined by his wife, Mrs. Lynn Prados (left), as he  
accepts the Nathan W. Dougherty Award from COE Dean Wayne Davis (right).

Prados is a former Vice President and University Professor Emeritus at  
UT, where he has served for more than 50 years, beginning as a  
graduate assistant in 1953. He was a full-time professor in the  
Department of Chemical Engineering for 13 years, and for the next 20  
years he held several administrative positions, including Associate  
Dean of Engineering, Dean of Admissions and Records, Acting Chancellor  
of the Knoxville and Martin campuses, Acting Director of Energy  
Conversion Programs at the University of Tennessee Space Institute and  
from 1973 through 1988, Prados was the Vice President for Academic  
Affairs of the statewide University of Tennessee system.

He returned to the Department of Chemical Engineering in 1989 and from  
1990-93 he was the department head. He served as the Senior Education  
Associate in the Engineering Directorate of the National Science  
Foundation from 1994 through 1997. Prados has been a consultant to  
industry, government and more than 30 universities and state education  
agencies in the United States and abroad.

Prados earned his B.S. in chemical engineering at the University of  
Mississippi and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees with majors in chemical  
engineering at the University of Tennessee.

After the award presentation to Prados, Dr. Bamin Khomami, professor  
and head of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering,  
announced the establishment of the John W. Prados Professorship in his  
department. The professorship was created by Malcolm Colditz and  
additionally supported by J. Michael Stone, both of whom are former  
students of Dr. Prados.

Additional awards presented during the evening included:


Outstanding Support Staff Award:

Julia Elkins, Administrative Services Assistant, Electrical  
Engineering and Computer Science
Kristin England, Communications Specialist, Nuclear Engineering

Outstanding Faculty Advisor:
Dr. J. Wallace Mayo, Instructor, Electrical Engineering and Computer  
Science

Allen & Hoshall Engineering Faculty Award:
Dr. Michael Berry, Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer  
Science

Moses E. and Mayme Brooks Distinguished Professor Award:
Dr. Leon Tolbert, Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Leon and Nancy Cole Superior Teaching Award:
Dr. John Landes, Professor, Mechanical, Aerospace and Biomedical  
Engineering

Charles Edward Ferris Faculty Award:
Dr. Carl McHargue, Professor, Materials Science and Engineering and  
Director, Center for Materials Processing


2010 Teaching Fellow Awards:

Dr. Richard Bennett, Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering  
and Director, Jerry E. Stoneking Engage Program

Dr. James Plank, Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Dr. Rupy Sawhney, Professor, Industrial and Information Engineering

2010 Research Fellow Awards:
Dr. Joshua Fu, Associate Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering

Dr. Yanfei Gao, Assistant Professor, Materials Science and Engineering

Dr. Bin Hu, Associate Professor, Materials Science and Engineering

Dr. Jian Huang, Associate Professor, Electrical Engineering and  
Computer Science

Dr. J. Wesley Hines, Professor, Nuclear Engineering

Dr. Stephen Paddison, Associate Professor, Chemical and Biomolecular  
Engineering

Dr. Xiaorui Wang, Assistant Professor, Electrical Engineering and  
Computer Science



College-wide faculty award winners, from left to right: Dr. Carl  
McHargue, professor in the Department of Materials Science and  
Engineering and director of the Center for Materials Processing, the  
Charles Edward Ferris faculty Award; Dr. J. Wallace Mayo, instructor  
in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, the  
Outstanding Faculty Advisor Award; Dr. Michael Berry, professor in the  
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, the Allen &  
Hoshall Engineering Faculty Award; Dr. John Landes, professor in the  
Department of Mechanical, Aerospace and Biomedical Engineering, the  
Leon and Nancy Cole Superior Teaching Award. Dr. Berry also accepted  
the Moses E. and Mayme Brooks Distinguished Professor Award for Dr.  
Leon Tolbert, also a professor in the ECE department, who was unable  
to attend the event. COE Dean Wayne Davis, far right, presented the  
awards.

Faculty Updates

CEE Department Head to Present Keynote Lecture

Dr. Dayakar Penumadu, professor and head of the Department of Civil  
and Environmental Engineering, will present one of the keynote  
lectures at the 9th International Conference on Sandwich Structures  
(ICSS-9) June 14-16, at the California Institute of Technology in  
Pasadena, California.






Pharr Receives Award from MRS

Dr. George Pharr received the Innovation in Materials Characterization  
Award (IMCA) at the 2010 MRS Spring Meeting in early April 2010.

This first-time award honors an outstanding advance in materials  
characterization that notably increases knowledge of the structure,  
composition, in situ behavior under outside stimulus, electronic  
behavior, or other characterization feature, of materials. The impact  
of the advance on materials research is the primary consideration in  
making this award, which is not limited to the method of  
characterization or the class of materials observed.

The 2010 IMCA was presented to Warren C. Oliver, Nanomechanics Inc.,  
and George M. Pharr, the University of Tennessee, "for seminal  
contributions to the development of the instrumentation and analysis  
methods of nanoindentation for characterizing the mechanical  
properties of materials at the micrometer- and nanometer-length  
scales. Their work on nanoindentation has profoundly impacted all  
fields of materials research where mechanical behavior is important."



Upcoming Conferences


Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference is returning  
to East Tennessee

50 years after its 1960 conference in Gatlinburg, the Nuclear Science  
Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference is returning to East  
Tennessee October 30 through November 6, 2010, at the Knoxville  
Convention Center. The event offers a great opportunity to meet old  
friends and colleagues, and to make new ones from all parts of the  
world. The technical sessions and casual meetings offer the best way  
to exchange knowledge and ideas in nuclear science, medical imaging,  
and detector development. The conference will include the RTSD and the  
Molecular Radiology of Breast Cancer workshops.

The Organizing Committee is planning a conference to bring together  
all aspects of the science in these disciplines to further the state- 
of-the-art and disseminate up-to-date scientific information through  
the oral and poster presentations. There will be several short courses  
and workshops before the main conferences. The popular refresher  
courses will be held during the week to review current topics of  
special interest. A commercial exhibition featuring the state-of-the- 
art products and services from a wide range of companies will take  
place during the middle part of the meeting.

Companion tours will include several short trips around East  
Tennessee. These will be both social and historic with visits to Oak  
Ridge and local museums. Technical tours to ORNL and local companies  
will also be offered.

For more information, visit http://www.nss-mic.org/2010/ or contact  
Dr. Chuck Melcher, who is a member of the organizing committee, at [log in to unmask] 
.

PDF: NSS10FinalCall.pdf



Student News

CEE Student is Awarded McClure Scholarship

Hongtai Yang, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Civil and  
Environmental Engineering has been selected to receive a $3900 award  
from the W.K. McClure Scholarship Fund for the Study of World Affairs  
to support his proposed research project in China this summer. The  
Center for International Education's Scholarship Selection Committee  
chose Yang for the award. Yang’s faculty advisor is Dr. Chris Cherry.

ASME Student Chapter Wins First Place in Student Design Competition


The ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) student chapter  
from the MABE Department at UT competed this past weekend in the  
District F (Southeast Section) student conference and competitions. It  
was held at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte.

A team of Ashley Trotter, Jacob Barrett and Greg Warren won a first  
place in the student design contest. The contest required the building  
and demonstration of a machine that sorted recyclable goods like  
glass, metal cans and glass jars.
A team of Sarah Keedy and Robert Davis also competed in the design  
contest. Josh Miller won a second place in the poster contest and  
Gregory Peterson competed in a speaking contest.

These photos show the machine being set up and in operation.

EECS Student Receives Best Oral Paper Prize

Ashraf B. Islam, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Electrical  
Engineering and Computer Science, working under Professor Syed K.  
Islam, received the CMOC best oral paper prize at the recently  
concluded 19th Annual CMOC (Connecticut Microelectronics and  
Optoelectronics Consortium) Symposium held April 7, 2010 in Dodd  
Center, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT. His paper, titled  
Fabrication and Characterization of Vertically Aligned Carbon  
Nanofiber as a Biosensor Platform, was chosen as the best oral  
presentation by the organizers of the CMOC 2010. The co-authors of the  
paper are Ph.D. student Salwa Mostafa and Professor Syed K. Islam. The  
award includes prize money from IEEE UConn chapter, gift cards from  
Center for Research on Interface Structure and Phenomena (CRISP) of  
Yale University and a certificate from the organizers.

CEE Senior Design Project Presentation

The Civil Engineering Senior Design Project Presentation will take  
place on Friday April 30th.  There are two different projects, one  
presentation will begin at 12:30 p.m. and the other will begin at 2:00  
p.m. The presentations are open to all faculty staff and students in  
300 Buehler Hall.

The first presentation will be on the civil site design of a middle  
school in Loudon County.  The second presentation will be of a  
Municipal building in Loudon County. For more information, contact  
Justin Bryan at 615-830-9335 or [log in to unmask]


COE Alumnus Wins Moot Court National Championship

Stephen Adams, a 2008 graduate of the College of Engineering and a  
participant in the TLSAMP program, was part of a team from the UT  
College of Law that won the Giles Sutherland Rich moot court  
championship in Washington, D.C. Adams is a second level law student.  
The team initially won the Houston Regional and advanced to the  
national finals. Adams and his partner, Josh Lee, argued a case before  
Judges Alan D. Lourie, Alvin A. Schall and Timothy B. Dyk of the  
Federal Circuit.


UT Space Institute Students Win American Institute of Aeronautics and  
Astronautics Awards

Two students from the University of Tennessee Space Institute (UTSI)  
have been recognized for their research at one of the nation's top  
aeronautic conferences.

The students attending the 2010 Southeastern Regional Student  
Conference of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics  
(AIAA) were awarded second and third place in the Masters Division.  
The conference, held in Destin, Fla. on April 8-9, included over 300  
delegates from 14 universities from the southeastern region.

Nadim Zgheib won second place for his paper, "Asymptotic Solutions for  
Longitudinal Waves in Solid Rocket Motors" and Michel Akiki won third  
place for his paper "Compressible Integral Formulation of the Two- 
Dimensional Porous Channel Flow." The studies focused on the  
analytical and numerical modeling of either wave propagation or  
compressible mean flow description in simulated solid rocket motors.

The two studies were supervised by UTSI Professor Joseph Majdalani who  
appears as second author on both papers.

Zgheib and Akiki are both from Kesrouan, Lebanon, and both graduated  
from Notre Dame University shortly before joining UTSI. In 2009, they  
received their master's degrees in aerospace engineering. Michel is  
currently working toward his Ph.D. in mechanical engineering. Zgheib  
has received a graduate school fellowship to pursue his Ph.D. in  
mechanical engineering at the University of Florida.

AIAA is the world's largest professional society devoted to the  
progress of engineering and science in aviation, space and defense.




Advising Update

Undergraduate students - Friday, April 30 is last day of classes, the  
total withdrawal deadline, and the deadline to apply to graduate in  
Fall 2010.  Undergraduate students apply to graduate online at http://registrar.tennessee.edu/graduation.shtml

Graduate students - Friday, April 30 is the last day of classes, total  
withdrawal deadline, and all Incomplete Grades must be removed for  
graduation.



Industrial and Information Engineering News

The Department of Industrial and Information is offering an  
undergraduate scholarship to new IIE majors. Deadline for application  
is April 30, 2010. For more information, contact Dr. Corky Ford at [log in to unmask] 
.



Attention COE Seniors: Senior Gift 2010

Make your Senior Gift Online!

Visit the Senior Gift 2010 web site in order to make your contribution  
online to the College Fund for Engineering or to one of the seven  
department funds.

Gifts of any size are welcome; however, seniors or graduate students  
who donate at least $50 will receive commemorative honor cords to wear  
at graduation as well as have a personalized brick placed on the  
Senior Sidewalk in Circle Park. Call the Tyson Alumni House at  
974-3011 for more information.

Your support is important, as it will benefit your fellow engineering  
students. Recently, the College Fund for Engineering has served as a  
crucial resource for college-wide programming such as Engage, expanded  
advising services, and the Pre-Collegiate Scholars Program as well as  
for purchasing specialized equipment and facility renovations.

Additionally, a Senior Gift will allow the college to seize future  
opportunities and jump-start future initiatives. Please consider  
joining your classmates in support of Senior Gift 2010.  Your Senior  
Gift will not only serve the immediate needs of engineering students,  
but it will set a wonderful example for other seniors, graduate  
students, underclassmen and future engineering students.

Please visit the Senior Gift web site or the Office of Engineering  
Development in 120 or 121 Perkins Hall in order to make a Senior Gift  
via check or credit card or contact them via email at [log in to unmask]  
for more information.



Outreach News

The College of Engineering is pleased to announce a special  
opportunity for its honors undergraduates!

HELM, the Honors Engineering Leadership Minor, is a partnership with  
other colleges and centers in the university to provide  
interdisciplinary  coursework emphasizing the context of engineering  
in the world. Find out more about this exciting new program here.


At the Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation’s annual Business  
Plan Competition, several undergraduate engineering students have won  
awards. They are:

Danny Smith, Senior, Aerospace Engineering for a specialty shoe cover  
designed to protect rock-climbing shoes.

Aeron Glover, Junior, Industrial Engineering in conjunction with two  
pre-business students for a web-based business designed around rating  
host families and other accommodations for study abroad students.

Austin Eldridge, Junior, Aerospace Engineering in conjunction with two  
management students for a communications business designed to support  
real estate sales.

Aron Beierschmitt,  Sophomore, Mechanical Engineering, for a business  
focusing on gaming apps and open source operating systems.

Congratulations to all!


UTK in Discussions with Chinese Universities

A delegation from UTK and the College of Engineering held a series of  
discussions in March 2010 with representatives of three Chinese  
universities. Dr. Masood Parang, associate dean for academic affairs,  
represented COE and visited Shanghai University (Shanghai), Wuhan  
University (Wuhan), and Sichuan University (Chengdu) to discuss  
possible student and faculty exchange agreements along with other  
methods of cooperation. Get more information along with photos here.




COE Joins Grand Challenge Scholar Program

The University of Tennessee College of Engineering has been named the  
newest member of a consortium of engineering schools with an approved  
National Academy of Engineering Grand Challenge Scholar Program  
(GCSP). Only six engineering schools in the country currently hold  
this designation.

In 2008, the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) identified 14 Grand  
Challenges for engineering in the 21st Century. These challenges  
represent the broad themes at the boundary of technology and society  
like “Make Solar Energy Economical” and “Provide Access to Clean  
Water”. NAE’s Grand Challenge Scholar Program (is the companion  
program for engineering schools that have accepted the challenge of  
designing combined curricular and extra-curricular programs to prepare  
students to be the generation that solves the grand challenges facing  
society. The founding members of GCSP are Duke University’s Pratt  
School of Engineering, the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering and  
the University of Southern California’s Viterbi School of Engineering.

Students graduating from this program will be designated a Grand  
Challenge Scholar, and nationally recognized with their GCSP peers  
from other participating schools on the National Academy website.

For more information, visit http://www.engineeringchallenges.org/ and http://www.grandchallengescholars.org/ 
.



Student Opportunities

Journal of Undergraduate Research Solicits Submissions

Pursuit: The Journal of Undergraduate Research at the University of  
Tennessee
Call for Submissions
Fall 2010, Volume 2, Issue 1

Pursuit: The Journal of Undergraduate Research at the University of  
Tennessee is the first UT publication dedicated to undergraduate  
research. The inaugural issue was released in March 2010. Please find  
the online version and more information here.

Submissions for the Fall 2010 Issue will be accepted from April 1,  
2010 through May 31, 2010. Pursuit accepts advanced, original,  
research-based submissions from undergraduate students in all academic  
colleges at the University of Tennessee. Graduates may submit their  
work within one year of their graduation date.

More information is found here.
Contact the editors at: [log in to unmask]

Pursuit is also currently accepting applications for the review board.  
Students in all majors are eligible and should have strong writing and  
editing skills. Applicants should submit a current resume and writing  
sample to the Pursuit editors via email [log in to unmask] or hard copy  
(F101 Melrose Hall, Chancellor's Honors Program Main Office) by May  
14, 2010.

An information session was held on Wednesday, April 14, at 7:00 PM in  
Melrose Hall Conference Room, but questions may be directed to [log in to unmask] 
.



Engineering Professional Practice Announcements


Announcing a New Name!

Engineering Professional Practice will be the new name of the College  
of Engineering co-op and internship program. The phrase “Office of”  
has been replaced with the word “Engineering” in an effort to be more  
descriptive and align better with other College of Engineering  
department names. While it will take the office several weeks to get  
the new name implemented in all printed and electronic media, the  
engineering community is invited to begin using the new name when  
speaking with other people about the office. For additional  
information about the use of the new name in any other printed  
material, please contact Todd Reeves, director of the Engineering  
Professional Practice program, at [log in to unmask] or 865-974-5323.

PLEASE NOTE: Students receiving engineering co-op or internship offers  
must go through the Office of Professional Practice if they want  
recognition for them on their UT transcript. Students receiving offers  
directly from employers may forward the information to the office and  
inquire about how to fulfill program requirements and receive credit  
for their work.



Engineering Professional Practice Student Feature

Featured student: Jacob Philpott


Jacob Philpott is a senior in aerospace engineering and currently  
working his first co-op rotation with JTEKT in Vonore, Tennessee. He  
wrote the following about his experience:

“My job involves working with the CAD (computer aided drafting)  
program CATIA in updating current production parts.”

“Here at JTEKT Vonore we design and manufacture hydraulic power  
steering gears for many major car companies – the biggest being  
Toyota. I work with the product engineering team and assist in any way  
possible, mostly by creating new drawings for new parts, as well as  
creating new parts using the CAD program CATIA.

“At times I will help assemble new prototype power steering gears that  
different car manufactures ask for. Since these are prototype gears,  
engineers will assemble and test the gears, whether it be two or 15  
gears. Once completed, we send these gears to the company and from  
there they receive further testing. Soon the Vonore location will be  
adding electric power steering gears to the mix, from the JTEKT  
location in Virginia, which should bring with it all sorts of new  
challenges.

“The program CATIA was first brought about in the design of the Boeing  
777. I hope to use this co-op training with the CATIA program to  
possibly earn a position as an aerospace engineer with the Boeing  
company after I complete my degree.”

For information on engineering co-op and internship assignments,  
contact Engineering Professional Practice at [log in to unmask] or  
865-974-5323.



Career Services Announcements




Farewell from Leslie Fox, COE Career Consultant

Dear College of Engineering Students, Faculty and Staff:

I wanted to take a moment to let all of you know that I am leaving my  
position as the Career Services Consultant for the College of  
Engineering effective Friday, April 30, 2010. I will be starting a new  
chapter in my career as I begin my role as an Education Project  
Manager with Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU) on May 10, 2010.

I have enjoyed my time here at the University of Tennessee and I  
appreciate having had the opportunity to work with each of you and get  
to know you professionally as well as personally.  Even though I will  
miss all of you, I look forward to continuing to work with you  
regarding opportunities for students in Oak Ridge and other Department  
of Energy positions that I may represent through ORAU.

I encourage all of you to continue working with the incredible team at  
the UT Career Services office and am proud to have had the experience  
of working with them and learning from them.  I am most grateful for  
the leadership of our Career Services Director, Russ Coughenour, who  
always supports new ideas and initiatives for the students.

I have no doubt that I leave the COE Career Consultant role in a great  
place that will only continue to grow and improve.  I will always be  
willing to assist any of you in the future and you will be in  
excellent hands with Russ Coughenour and the career services team as  
they plan for my replacement.

If you have any questions or would like to schedule an appointment to  
discuss career planning, resume reviews, job searching, interviews,  
etc., please feel free to contact Career Services at 865-974-5435 or  
the Career Services Director, Russ Coughenour at [log in to unmask]

Thank you again for everything!

Sincerely, Leslie


Be ready for Fall Recruiting!

Part Time Job Fair	Wednesday, August 25
Engineering Career Success Week	Monday–Friday, September 12–17
Graduate School for Engineers Workshop	Tuesday, September 14
Volunteer & Service Corps Fair	Wednesday, September 15
Logistics Fair (Industrial Engineers invited)	Monday, September 27
Fall Job Fair	Tuesday, September 28


For more information, visit the Career Services website.

If you have submissions for @COE, the college's electronic newsletter,  
please send them to Kim Cowart at [log in to unmask] by 12:00 noon on  
Thursdays.









-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
To view the CAMPCOMM archives or Join/Leave the list:
http://listserv.utk.edu/archives/campcomm.html