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A research team led by a Waterloo Engineering professor has developed technology to track and measure environmental degradation in rivers.

Bruce MacVicar, a professor of civil and environmental engineering, is using synthetic stone tracers to monitor how sediment is transported in rivers during floods.

The movement of sediment has an important impact on the health of rivers and infrastructure such as bridges and pipelines.

This year has been one like no other with the coronavirus upending lives in ways unimaginable at the beginning of 2020.Engineering a new normal illustration

In October WEAL’s feature story, seven Waterloo Engineering researchers and alumni share their pandemic initiatives and opinions on how different buildings, education, work and everyday activities look now and could look in the future.

A professor at Waterloo Engineering is one step closer to her dream of establishing a world-leading carbon nanotechnology centre after winning a prestigious award for highly promising researchers.

Chemical engineering professor Aiping Yu is one of six nation-wide recipients of 2020 E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowships announced today by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.

Alan Plumtree, an inventor of a pump that provides clean drinking water to developing countries, died on November 5.

Plumtree, a Waterloo mechanical engineering professor, and Alfred Rudin, a Waterloo chemistry professor, created the hand-operated Alan Plumtree and Alfred Rudinpump in the late 1970s after being approached by the International Development Research Centre.

A research team at Waterloo Engineering has been awarded $800,000 in federal funding to develop compostable personal protective equipment (PPE) and antimicrobial coatings to help fight COVID-19.

A faculty member at Waterloo Engineering is one of 40 experts from around the world featured in a new book on the future of infrastructure.

Nadine Ibrahim, a civil and environmental engineering lecturer, shares her insights in Urban Infrastructure: Reflections for 2100, a collection of science fiction short stories, essays and poems.

Climate change, sustainability, resilience and technology are recurring themes as contributors explore how infrastructure, described as the pillar of civilization, might change in the next 80 years.

Researchers at Waterloo Engineering helped create a portable version of a tiny, powerful laser device with potential applications in fields ranging from medical imaging to detecting hidden explosives.

In a project involving the University of Waterloo and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), scientists developed a quantum cascade laser capable of operating at temperatures much higher than previously possible.