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For the week of May 21th, 2010

@COE will be published on a bi-weekly basis beginning May 21. The next  
edition will be sent out on Friday, June 4.

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



Faculty Updates

EECS Professors Receive NSF Grant

Dr. Fangxing (Fran) Li, Assistant Professor, and Dr. Kevin Tomsovic,  
CTI Professor and Head, both of the Department of Electrical  
Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), received a three-year,  
$300,000 research grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF).

The objective of this NSF project, entitled “Ensuring Security and  
Reducing Price Volatility of Power Systems with Extensive Controllable  
Load,” is to develop an approach to reduce the electricity price  
volatility while ensuring security in the future power systems with a  
high penetration of controllable loads. The approach is based on an  
expanded concept of a critical load level, where a price step change  
occurs, combined with a feedback control considering load response to  
time-delayed price signals. The research will assist the faster  
adoption of controllable loads and renewable energy as both financial  
and reliability risk would be reduced.

The project is funded by the Power, Controls and Adaptive Networks  
(PCAN) program under the Electrical, Communications and Cyber Systems  
(ECCS) division of NSF. It will start on May 15th, 2010 and run  
through April 30th, 2013. Dr. Li is the Principal Investigator and Dr.  
Tomsovic is the co-Principal Investigator of this effort.



MSE Professor Organizes International Conference

Last week, Dr. Gajanan Bhat, a professor in the Department of  
Materials Science and Engineering, attended the Fiber Society  
International Conference in Bursa, Turkey. Dr. Bhat, who was the  
president of the Fiber Society, was one of the key persons responsible  
for organizing this meeting for the first time in Turkey. Dr. Bhat  
presented a research paper on “Improvement in Tensile Properties and  
Morphological Changes on Draw-Annealing of Melt Spun PPS Fibers.” The  
paper was coauthored by his PhD student Prabhakar Gulgunje, who  
graduated last week. The conference was attended by more than 300  
delegates from 25 countries. The fiber society organizes two technical  
conferences every year, with the spring conference being held in an  
international venue and the fall conference in the US. Additional  
information on the conference and the fiber society is available at http://www.thefibersociety.org/



Tolbert Gives Seminar in Thailand

Dr. Leon M. Tolbert, Min Kao Professor in the Min Kao Department of  
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, gave a one-day technical  
seminar, "Power Electronics Applications for Transportation and  
Energy," May 11 at the Provincial Electrical Authority in Bangkok,  
Thailand.  His talk was co-sponsored by King Mongkut's Institute of  
Technology Ladkrabang and covered topics such as hybrid electric  
vehicles, silicon carbide power electronics, multilevel converters,  
reactive power compensation, and Smart Grid applications.





Wang Receives 3-Year Grant

Dr. Xiaorui Wang, assistant professor in the Department of Electrical  
Engineering and Computer Science, received a 3-year grant from the  
National Science Foundation (NSF). This $258K grant from the Division  
of Computing and Communication Foundations (CCF) will support Dr.  
Wang’s research on power-aware chip multiprocessor (CMP, i.e., multi- 
core processor) design from 2010 to 2013. Since power consumption has  
become a major constraint for the further throughput improvement of  
CMPs, Dr. Wang’s project will try to optimize the performance of a CMP  
within a power budget limited by the CMP’s cooling, packaging, and  
power supply capacities. This award is the 4th NSF grant that Dr. Wang  
received as PI since 2007. After joining UT, Dr. Wang has received  
$1.76M of external research funding (his personal share), including  
$1.15M from NSF.



ENGINEERING DIVERSITY PROGRAMS UPDATE

Pippin Receives Alex Haley Award

On May 16, 2010, James T. Pippin, outgoing Director of the Office of  
Diversity Programs (retiring June 30, 2010), received the prestigious  
Alex Haley Scholarship for Education at the Seventh Annual Alex Haley  
Scholarship Auction & Celebrity Golf Tournament Reception. Pippin was  
selected by the Alex Haley Black Millennium Focus Committee.  
Presenting the Award to Pippin was Anthony Howard UTK College of  
Engineering Alum and engineer with General Motors Corporation. The  
reception was held at Knoxville’s Crown Plaza Hotel.



EDP Welcomes New Director

The Office of Engineering Diversity Programs welcomes Todd Griffin as  
the new director of EDP. Travis is excited about working with the COE  
faculty and staff to enhance the EDP initiatives. He may be reached at  
974-1956 or via e-mail at [log in to unmask]







Student News


MSE Professor and Student Receive Research Awards

On Friday, April 23, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering  
undergraduate seniors Arnold Bunch, Jeff Edlund, and Amanda Matthews  
provided a demonstration for a group of fifty 5th graders at Bearden  
Elementary School in Knoxville. The team gave the students a brief  
introduction to the use of hydrogen in fuel cells to generate  
electricity and then showed the students the working scale car they  
had built that was powered by a small hydrogen fuel cell.

The car was the one used by the team to take fourth place in the ChemE  
Car Competition at the regional annual student meeting of the American  
Institute of Chemical Engineers, held in Raleigh, North Carolina on  
April 10. The UT CBE students then demonstrated how chemical reaction  
times can be controlled by using different concentrations of reactants  
by showing the iodine clock reaction and having the students guess how  
long it would take for the reactant mixture to turn dark blue.

After the presentation, the students came up to the demonstration  
table to view the car and ask questions. UT senior Arnold Bunch  
remarked, “I was surprised at the level of excitement and genuine  
enthusiasm of the students. It was fun to see them excited about the  
possibility of one day making their own hydrogen powered car.”

In November, a different group of students will take the car to the  
national competition in Salt Lake City to compete with 60 other teams  
from around the US and Puerto Rico.



Upcoming Events

Agriculture Campus Hosts Research Symposium

The Comparative & Experimental Medicine and Public Health Research  
Symposium will be held June 14 & 15, 2010, on the University of  
Tennessee Agricultural Campus. Eighty-eight animal and human health- 
related presentations have been scheduled, as well as several keynote  
addresses by experts in the fields of public health genomics, stem  
cells, and exercise science.

The event is free, and you may attend as many presentations as you  
would like, however do please register in order to help coordinators  
of the event with the logistics for the symposium. (However, if you  
are presenting, there is no need for you to register). Deadline for  
registration is Friday, June 4.

To register for free, please click here.

To find out more about the symposium, please visit their site. Links  
to featured speakers are online, and a preliminary program and  
schedule will be coming soon.



UT Harvest Market

The UT Harvest Market will take place on Friday, May 21 from 2-4 PM  
(or until sold out) in the Friendship Plaza of the UT Gardens. The  
market is the result of a multi-disciplinary internship program for UT  
students through a market garden on the Organic Crops Unit at the  
ETREC to stimulate interest in beginning farming and preserving  
farmland. Five student interns have participated in all aspects of the  
farm market from business planning to production to marketing.

The market will feature kale, Swiss chard, green onions, spicy greens,  
peas (in limited quantities) and strawberries.

Accepted methods of payment include cash, check and credit (Visa, MC  
or Discover) or debit.

Parking is limited; please consider walking, carpooling, biking or  
taking the bus.

Come early for the best selection!



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.



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]



Outreach News

Pre-Collegiate Research Scholars program

On May 7, 2010 the Pre-Collegiate Research Scholars program held its  
year–end celebration and student poster session at Farragut High  
School. Now in its fourth year, this outstanding program places well- 
qualified high school students in research laboratories at UT.

A very special thank you for the efforts of the College of Engineering  
faculty who made this program a success by mentoring students in their  
laboratories this year:

Dr. Qiang He, Civil and Environmental Engineering
Dr. Bin Hu, Material Science and Engineering
Dr. Veerle Keppens, Material Science and Engineering
Dr. Husheng Li, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Dr. Mingjun Zhang, Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering
Dr. Quihong Zhao, Civil and Environmental Engineering
Dr. Xiaopeng Zhao, Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering

A bonus at the poster session was a demonstration of the Farragut  
FIRST robot. Farragut was one of 3 local high school FIRST teams  
mentored this year by the MABE department.

Pictures from the Poster session.

MABE and FIRST Robotics.



Engineering Professional Practice Announcements


PLEASE NOTE: Students receiving engineering co-op or internship offers  
must go through Engineering 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: Tony Mathis


Tony Mathis is a mechanical engineering major who spent the fall 2009  
term working a co-op rotation with Shaw Industries.

“My co-op experience with Shaw Industries, Inc. has been great! I have  
worked on lots of projects for the plant to keep me busy – from  
building a box for United Way donations, to designing a room for a  
machine that I have to get from a plant in Washington to the plant  
where I work in Ringgold, Georgia.

“All of the engineers I have spoken with have said that they had a co- 
op. They said that it has been vital to their careers because they had  
that on-the-job experience before going into the job market, and knew  
what they did and did not want to do.

“Also, lots of employers will not even consider candidates without  
that on-the-job experience. I would definitely recommend!”

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





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.









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