Center for Advanced Materials Processing Newsletter: March 2023

Center for Advanced Materials Processing Newsletter: March 2023

Message From the Director

I am excited to highlight in this issue of our newsletter a number of new opportunities for CAMP and our affiliates. Our researchers continue to develop advanced materials that solve complex environmental, energy and even astronautical problems. In addition, CAMP is supporting the development of a new facility that will contribute to improving the well-being of older members of the Northern New York community. I invite you to read more below.      

— Devon Shipp, Director of CAMP, Professor of Chemistry & Biochemistry

Containing Contaminants

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Environmental Science Advances Cover

Heavy metal can be bad. And we don’t mean the music. We’re talking about the heavy metal that seeps into the environment and winds up in our water. In fact, it’s one of the leading causes of water pollution. Enter Clarkson researchers, who have determined how to 3D-print sustainable bio-based adsorbents that can remove toxic contaminants.

Space Solutions

Blue Origin may be aiming for outer space, but it has its sights set on Clarkson. Professor Selma Mededovic Thagard was a recent recipient of one of its grants, which will fund her research on using non-thermal plasma to purify wastewater on space flights. In phase one of her project, she will develop several lab-scale plasma systems.

Read More About the Grant

Reading Recommendation

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The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

Here’s a recommendation for your reading list: the cover article in a recent issue of The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. Co-authored by Assistant Professor of Physics Dhara Trivedi, the article details the research of Trivedi and her team that centers on using 2D materials in solar energy harvesting devices.

Read More About the Journal

School of Arts & Sciences Newsletter: June 2023

School of Arts & Sciences Newsletter: June 2023

Message From the Dean

Last month, we marked the transition of Golden Knight graduates as they venture into bright futures, carrying the Clarkson values and entrepreneurial spirit with them. I am so proud of all our graduates, and especially those who passed through the doors of the School of Arts & Sciences and shared their intelligence, energy and passion with us. I wish them the very best in their future endeavors.

— Darryl Scriven, Dean of Arts & Sciences, Fellow in The Shipley Center for Innovation

Reality Augmented

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Stories from the Circle logo

Among the many novel applications of augmented reality (AR) is using it to experience someone else’s perspective. Professors from Clarkson and Arizona State created an AR app, Stories From the Circle, that allows visitors to Columbus Circle in Syracuse, New York, to hear various perspectives on Columbus from Indigenous people, Italian Americans and others.

Read More About the AR App

Core Connections

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Members of the Biochemistry & Proteomics Lab at the workshop
Mahfuza Akter

Making connections is at the core of a Clarkson education. Sometimes these connections are interdisciplinary, and sometimes they’re international. Members of the Biochemistry & Proteomics Lab fostered the latter recently as they participated in the Smart Diaspora 2023 workshop at the West University of Timisoara, Romania.

Read the story

 

Leading the Way

Although she is still a biology PhD candidate, Mahfuza Akter is already a leader. In fact, she was singled out by the American Society for Microbiology to receive the Future Leaders Mentoring Fellowship, which will provide educational and career opportunities to propel her upward trajectory, as well as give her a chance to mentor her peers. 

Read More About Mahfuza Akter's Fellowship

Exhibiting Talent

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Dan Wellings

Many students in the School of Arts & Sciences take the arts very seriously. For example, communication, media & design major Dan Wellings ’23 recently had some of his work exhibited at the museum dedicated to renowned American artist Frederic Remington. Wellings showed two experimental shorts in the College Student Juried Art Exhibit at the Frederic Remington Art Museum.

Read More the Exhibit

School of Arts & Sciences Newsletter: March 2023

School of Arts & Sciences Newsletter: March 2023

Message From the Dean

This Women’s History Month, we celebrate the women at Clarkson who power breakthroughs, ignite discussions and spearhead transformative change. The professors featured in this issue have all left an indelible mark in their spheres of influence — and they’re not done yet. I hope you will enjoy reading about their accomplishments, research, awards and scholarship.

— Darryl Scriven, Dean of Arts & Sciences, Fellow in The Shipley Center for Innovation

For Your Reading List

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The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters Cover

Here’s a recommendation for your reading list: the cover article in a recent issue of The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. Co-authored by Assistant Professor of Physics Dhara Trivedi, the article details the research of Trivedi and her team that centers on using 2D materials in solar energy harvesting devices.

Read More About the Publication

Funding Creativity

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Rebecca Pelky

You may remember Rebecca Pelky from previous newsletters highlighting prizes she won and books she published. She’s at it again, this time receiving a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. The funding will allow her time to focus on her writing while she continues her role as a professor. 

Read More About Rebecca Pelky's Fellowship

Coulter School of Engineering Newsletter: April 2023

Coulter School of Engineering Newsletter: April 2023

Message From the Dean

A main focus of our mission in the Coulter School of Engineering is to benefit humanity — applying innovative technologies to solve problems that affect the well-being of people and our environment. The stories we share in this issue of our newsletter illustrate how our faculty and students are doing their part to fulfill this mission. Please enjoy reading about them and don’t hesitate to get in touch.

— Bill Jemison
Dean of the Wallace H. Coulter School of Engineering / Tony Collins Professor of Innovative Engineering Culture

Saving Winter Sports

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Cheel Arena Construction

The effects of climate change are becoming increasingly apparent, especially in places like the North Country, where our winters are warming considerably. Not only will this affect livelihoods, but it will also impact sports — a major concern for those of us who live for hockey. Clarkson is doing its part to save winter through a new green hockey arena ice system.

Read More About the Cheel Arena Project

A Beautiful Partnership

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Micron Technology Logo

Micron Technology has awarded Professors Jihoon Seo and Alan Rossner a project to research the environmental sustainability of chemical mechanical planarization consumable manufacturing. On the heels of Micron’s announcement that it will invest $100 billion in a semiconductor fabrication facility in Upstate New York, this project looks like the beginning of a beautiful partnership. 

Read More About the Micron Technology Partnership

A Knight Sweep

Snow and ice wasn’t the only thing taking Wisconsin by storm this February. Golden Knights swept top spots at this year’s SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenge, winning first place in multiple categories with their diesel snowmobile. It’s a fitting farewell to the vehicle, which will be sunsetted as the team participates in the hybrid category next year. 

Read More About the Golden Knights Sweep

PFAS Remediation

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Environmental Science & Technology Letters cover

Because PFAS in the environment are so widespread, we’re going to need every method available to destroy them. At Clarkson, our researchers have already come up with a number of remediation strategies, and now we have one more. Professor Yang Yang has developed a transformative mechanocatalytic technology that can destroy solid PFAS.  

Read More About the Remediation Strategies

Coulter School of Engineering Newsletter: July 2023

Coulter School of Engineering Newsletter: July 2023

Message From the Dean

Toxic forever chemicals, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), is the focus of research of several Clarkson University Professors. Recently, their work is receiving well-deserved attention in the form of federal grants and national journal recognition. And other Coulter School faculty and staff continue to gain recognition in the wider community, thanks to their ingenuity and scholarship. We are highlighting some of their accomplishments below.
— Bill Jemison, Dean of the Wallace H. Coulter School of Engineering/Tony Collins Professor of Innovative Engineering Culture

PFAS Sensors Developed

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Glasses with water

Clarkson researchers have developed easy-to-use low-cost sensors for testing per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Their work was recently highlighted in C&EN Chemical Engineering News, a chemical science and technology magazine covering high-profile research, government, industry, professional and technical news from around the world for the chemical, chemical engineering and related fields.

Read More About the Sensors

DoD Award

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Clarkson University professors who are receiving the award

The race is on for a cross-sectional team of Clarkson Professors to find and design new materials to remove toxic PFAS from groundwater. The team will bring their expertise to the project.The goal is to identify the process by which both capacity and speed of removal are optimized.

Read more about the award

Fulbright Award

With Concrete construction responsible for more than 7% of global carbon dioxide emissions, Professor Robert Thomas has been selected as a Fulbright Specialist to collaborate to help support emerging low-carbon concrete technologies as a Fulbright Specialist at Birla Institute of Technology and Science (BITS) in Telangana, India. 

Read More About the Fulbright Scholarship Award

New Pathway

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Student working on research

Students coming to Clarkson will have a new pathway to learn about bioengineering research. With the help of a new grant, a new program aimed at preparing a diverse cadre of students for careers in biomedical research is launching this fall.

Read More About the New Pathway

University Newsletters

University Newsletters

Find out what's happening at Clarkson, from those making it happen.

Throughout the year Clarkson programs, departments, and schools report on their latest innovations and achievements through newsletters which are archived here. Scroll down to find news from the Center for Advanced Materials (CAMP), Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, the Coulter School of Engineering & Applied Sciences, Electrical & Computer Engineering, the Honors Program, the Institute for a Sustainable Environment (ISE), the Lewis School of Health & Life Sciences, our Global Supply Chain Management program, Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, and the David D. Reh School of Business.

If you would like to be added to the subscribers' list for any newsletter, please email mer@clarkson.edu.