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University of Waterloo spin-off company CELLECT. is revolutionizing women’s health with a non-invasive disease screening method. This user-friendly alternative to Pap smears integrates nanotechnology with menstrual products to detect HPV and cervical cancer.

Founded in 2023 by CT Murphy (BASc '23, nanotechnology engineering & MASc in progress, chemical engineering), the company aims to empower women by making health care more inclusive and less intimidating.

Waterloo-based startup VueReal has secured $58.4 million in Series C funding to expand its production capabilities and accelerate the application of its microprinting technology in industries such as automotive and healthcare.

The company was founded in 2016 by two Waterloo Engineering alumni, Dr. Reza Chaji (PhD ’08, electrical and computer engineering) and Dr. Ehsanollah Fathi (PhD ’11, electrical and computer engineering). The company makes energy and cost-efficient microscopic LEDs and sensors and aims to transform semiconductor fabrication.

Waterloo Engineering students excelled at Ontario’s top student engineering competition last weekend, earning multiple top-three finishes.

Held at McMaster University, the Ontario Engineering Competition featured 40 Waterloo undergraduates who showcased their problem-solving and design skills across nine categories.

Two Waterloo graduate students have earned a prestigious national award for their research in quantum imaging, highlighting the power of interdisciplinary collaboration.

Sarah Odinotski and Jack DeGooyer, PhD candidates in electrical and computer engineering and researchers at the Institute for Quantum Computing, have received Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships for their work on advanced imaging technology.

Three graduates of Waterloo Engineering have teamed up to improve health care through the use of autonomous robots to perform routine, time-consuming functions.

Nima Zamani (BASc ’14, MASc ’18), Tim Lasswell (BASc ’14, MASc ’17) and John Van Leeuwen (BSc ’81) are co-founders of Cobionix, which makes a cobot – short for collaborative robot – designed for tele-assisted ultrasound procedures.

The Faculty of Engineering honoured several faculty and staff members last night for their outstanding excellence at its annual Engineering Awards Dinner.

Hosted by Dean Mary Wells, this event celebrated 19 individuals with awards for their teaching, research and service excellence.

Tiny swimming robots developed by researchers at Waterloo Engineering have promising potential applications in fields including environmental cleanup and specialized medical procedures.

The research team was inspired by water bugs to create microrobots that can be guided by light to move on the surface of water. And to propel them, the researchers used a protein taken from the suction cups of squids.

Research from the University of Waterloo shows that Artificial Intelligence (AI) can improve academic writing and facilitate peer reviews. 

The study, led by Hilda Hadan, a PhD Candidate from the Department of Systems Design Engineering, found that reviewers perceived AI-paraphrased abstracts in research papers as more honest and compelling than human-written ones.

A chemical engineering professor has been recognized for extraordinary contributions to advancing equity and inclusion in Canadian academia.

Dr. Tizazu Mekonnen was celebrated earlier today at a university-wide reception as a recipient of the 2024 Faculty Association of the University of Waterloo (FAUW) Equity & Inclusivity Award. 

 A professor at Waterloo Engineering has been elected a fellow of an organization founded almost 200 years ago to promote the advancement of geographical science.

Dr. Alexander Wong of systems design engineering is one of 16,000 members of the United Kingdom-based Royal Geographical Society, which bills itself as the largest and most active geological society in the world.