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In a world hungry for clean energy, engineers have created a new material that converts the simple mechanical vibrations all around us into electricity to power sensors in everything from pacemakers to spacecraft.

The first of its kind and the product of a decade of work by researchers at the University of Waterloo and the University of Toronto, the novel generating system is compact, reliable, low-cost and very, very green.

A group of Waterloo Engineering students got some industry assistance with their Capstone Design Project from a team at Sleeman Breweries.

Waterloo Engineering alumnus Melanie Pastorius (BASc, chemical engineering), a quality assurance manager at Sleeman, and her colleague Jonathan Crawshaw, a brewing technical specialist, helped the students land an idea for a project that studied carbon capture from the brewing process.

A professor at Waterloo Engineering is part of an ambitious, $24-million research project that received the green light from the federal government this week.

Dr. Yimin Wu, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering, is a co-applicant on CANSTOREnergy: Seasonal storage of renewable energy, a six-year initiative involving dozens of participants.

Two professors at the University of Waterloo are members of a team that has been chosen to represent Canada at the next Venice Biennale showcase of architecture.

Adrian Blackwell and David Fortin, both professors at the Waterloo School of Architecture, belong to Architects Against Housing Alienation (AAHA), which will launch Not for Sale!, an architectural activist campaign, at the Canada Pavilion in Giardini, Italy.

Two Waterloo Engineering alumni were recognized by Canada's Clean50 for their contributions to sustainability. 

The annual Clean50 Individual awards celebrate leaders whose collaborative efforts help create a job-rich, cleaner, healthier, innovation based low-carbon economy that supports all Canadians.

Six professors at Waterloo Engineering were awarded almost $1.5 million in federal funding today through a program created to encourage high-risk, high-reward, collaborative research.

The funding is part of $200 million in support announced for projects across the country through the New Frontiers in Research Fund. Campus-wide at the University of Waterloo, 10 projects are to receive a total of almost $3 million.

The Indigenous and Black Engineering and Technology PhD Project (IBET), led by Waterloo chemical engineering professor Dr. Tizazu Mekonnen, is expanding its partnership with Mitacs to give Indigenous and Black PhD students the opportunity to conduct research at another Canadian IBET partner institution.

The IBET Connect Award, valued at $90,000, will be offered exclusively to IBET fellows by Mitacs. Up to 10 fellows will receive a stipend to travel to and conduct a two- to four-month research or innovation-based project at an IBET partner academic institution.

The University of Waterloo's Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) welcomed 17 elementary school classes on campus to learn about quantum information science and technology. 

These visits were part of a larger “Kids on Campus” program which provides school students with opportunities to see guest speakers and engage in activities focused on learning more about science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). Organized by Waterloo’s Engineering Outreach, the program includes visits to other stops on campus such as the RoboHub and the Sedra Student Design Centre.

Waterloo-based e-commerce startup Perpetua is utilizing the power of co-op students to drive its global growth. 

Perpetua was co-founded by Waterloo Engineering alumnus Rosco Hill (BASc '03, electrical and computer engineering) and fellow University alumnus Joe Rideout (BMath '03). Since opening its doors in 2016, the company has grown from 40 employees to more than 200.