Lego robots, along with creative thinking, problem-solving skills and teamwork, will be in action in the Engineering 5 building on December 4 as 250 youngsters aged nine to 14 compete in the FIRST League Lego (FLL) Waterloo qualifier, co-sponsored by Waterloo Engineering. Competing in this year’s “Food Factor” challenge, the teams have spent the last eight weeks building and programming Lego Mindstorm robots to accomplish up to 15 missions on a specialized mat. The missions include collecting bacteria and washing them off in a sink, delivering groceries, reversing pollution to protect food and lowering the temperature to keep refrigerated food safe. Teams will also present projects to develop innovative solutions to ensure the safe delivery of food to dinner tables.
Faculty
December 6 Remembrance Ceremony
The Women’s Studies Society and the Women’s Centre at the University of Waterloo are hosting a December 6th Remembrance Ceremony to commemorate the lives of the women killed at Ecole Polytechnique on December 6, 1989 and to raise awareness of the continued need to prevent violence and abuse against women. The ceremony will take place on Tuesday, December 6 in the Student Life Centre, Multi-Purpose Room (attached to the Great Hall) from 12 noon-1 pm. All are welcome. White ribbons can be picked up at the Women’s Centre in the SLC for those unable to attend the event.
Engineering researchers to showcase innovations
Some of the brightest Waterloo Engineering faculty members and students will showcase leading-edge technology at this week’s WE Innovate. More than 50 exhibits will be displayed at the annual exhibit of Waterloo Engineering research December 7 from 4 to 7 p.m. on the third floor of the Engineering 5 building.
Engineering research showcased at WE Innovate
Industry representatives, students and the public had a first-hand look at Waterloo Engineering’s innovative engineering research at this year’s We Innovate held in Engineering 5 on December 7. The research on display ranged from work on quieter wind turbines, flood resistant housing and fire-retardant material to crashworthy auto parts, anti-icing agents for concrete and 3D scanners that could help surgeons and dentists.
Waterloo Engineering spin-off wins recognition for technology
Less than a year after spinning off from Waterloo Engineering, Innovative Processing Technologies (IPT) has been recognized by the Ontario government for its breakthrough Multiple Memory Material (MMM) technology, known for making smart materials smarter. IPT and a Waterloo Engineering team led by mechanical and mechatronics professor Norman Zhou have been awarded market readiness funding by the Ontario Centres of Excellence. Valued at $130,000, this fund will support development and qualification of prototypes specifically for automotive applications.
Unique ZENN car on display in E5
Zero emissions, no noise was the promise of the ZENN Low Speed Vehicle (LSV), produced by the ZENN Motor Company of Toronto between 2006 and 2010. A rare pre-production model is on display to the public in the Engineering 5 lobby until mid-January. It was brought to the university by Mehrdad Kazerani, a Waterloo professor of electrical and computer engineering, whose research team will be using the vehicle after the exhibition ends. The ZENN is a fully functional, two passenger, front wheel drive, electric vehicle that was produced at an assembly plant in Saint-Jerome, Quebec.
Ng honoured with prestigious speaker award
Chemical engineering professor Flora Ng has won the 2011 Hikal Chemcon Distinguished Speaker Award. She will be presented with the award at CHEMCON, the annual conference of the Indian Institute of Chemical Engineers, to be held in Bangalore, India December 27-29. This year’s conference theme is Chemical Engineering in Synergistic Growth. Ng will deliver her award lecture on Catalytic Distillation: Applications for the Production of Green Fuel and Chemicals.
Alumna wins Canadian Architecture Student Award
Prithula Prosun, a recent graduate of Waterloo’s School of Architecture, has won a Canadian Architect Student Award of Merit for her master’s thesis project Lift House that provides flood-proof housing for the Bangladeshi poor. Prosun developed a house that rises with flood waters and then lowers once flooding recedes. In October, Prosun’s project was honoured by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada for applying leading-edge research to real-world situations.
Chemical engineering at Waterloo described as hot stuff
A Waterloo Region Record article, entitled UW chemical engineering students hope to change the future, takes a look at the wide range of innovative research taking place in the department’s new home in Engineering 6. Undergraduate and graduate students, as well as current faculty and retired faculty members were interviewed for the feature that describes Waterloo’s chemical engineering as “hot stuff.” The department, once housed in the first facility built on Waterloo’s campus, now has 800 undergraduate students, 155 grad students, 35 faculty, 15 staff and more than 4,000 alumni.
PhD student receives fuel cell honours
Drew Higgins, a chemical engineering doctoral candidate, was recently awarded third place in the Dr. Bernard S. Baker Student Award Competition, an international award recognizing exceptional students in the field of fuel cell technologies. He was honoured at the Fuel Cell Seminar and Exposition which took place in Orlando, Florida in November. Selection for the award was based on the quality of completed and/or proposed student based research work and involved competition with many students working in various fuel cell related fields worldwide.
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