2022 Media Watch Archives

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Society of Women Engineers

SWE Diverse Podcast: Domino Master’s Wonder Women Team

Society of Women Engineers -
On this episode of Diverse, SWE President Rachel Morford sits down with two members of FOX’s Domino Master’s Wonder Women Team, Farah Bajwa and Brianne Martin. Listen as they talk about their experience on Domino Masters and the engineering knowledge and background they brought to the competition. … Farah Bajwa … received a bachelor’s degree from the University of California, Irvine. Her electro-mechanical engineering major was a custom major, as it wasn’t formally offered. Read More
Science Friday

The Cephalo-Inspired Technology Of The Future

Science Friday -
“Cephalopods are such exciting sources of inspiration,” says Alon Gorodetsky, [associate professor], a materials scientist at the University of California, Irvine. “The things they do, how they move, even their brains—it’s like science fiction stuff.” … In this segment, Ira chats with Gorodetsky and other technologists about an array of cephalopod-inspired innovations, from adaptive camouflage to self-healing materials. Read More
Pipeline & Gas Journal

Hydrogen Blending Well into Climate Change Discussion

Pipeline & Gas Journal -
“We continue to work with SoCalGas on transforming several parts of its gas system for introducing some percentage of hydrogen initially and transforming it for eventually carrying all hydrogen,” said Jack Brouwer, UCI engineering professor and hydrogen [National] Fuel Cell Research [Center] director. UCI’s work with Sempra’s SoCalGas utility involves determining what impacts hydrogen-natural gas blends would have on various gas-fired appliances and end-uses. “We’ve found these appliances can handle blends of up to 30% hydrogen with no problem, and in most cases with reduction of nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions,” Brouwer said. Read More
AZO Materials

Novel Technique Differentially Maps Phonon Momenta with Atomic Resolution

AZO Materials -
“We developed a novel technique to differentially map phonon momenta with atomic resolution, which enables us to observe nonequilibrium phonons that only exist near the interface,” stated co-author Xiaoqing Pan, UCI professor of materials science and engineering and physics, Henry Samueli Endowed Chair in Engineering, and IMRI director. Pan adds, “This work marks a major advance in the field because it’s the first time we have been able to provide direct evidence that the interplay between diffusive and specular reflection largely depends on the detailed atomistic structure.” Read More
PhysOrg

Phonon dynamics enable a deeper understanding of how heat travels through quantum dots

Phys.org -
"We developed a novel technique to differentially map phonon momenta with atomic resolution, which enables us to observe nonequilibrium phonons that only exist near the interface," said co-author Xiaoqing Pan, UCI professor of materials science and engineering and physics, Henry Samueli Endowed Chair in Engineering, and IMRI director. "This work marks a major advance in the field because it's the first time we have been able to provide direct evidence that the interplay between diffusive and specular reflection largely depends on the detailed atomistic structure." Read More  
Forbes

This Startup Raised Over $10 Million To Make Metal Manufacturing More Efficient And Sustainable

Forbes -
Foundation Alloy, a vertically integrated metal part production platform, announced it has raised a $10.5 million seed funding round …. The startup, which specializes in manufacturing high performing metal parts, was founded in February of this year by CEO Jake Guglin, … Jasper Lienhard, and Professors Chris Schuh (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and Tim Rupert (University of California Irvine.) … The company says that through the technologies it has developed, it can make parts using less energy and creating less waste, making the manufacturing process more sustainable for the environment. Read More
Orange County Register

Here are the colleges that will compete to make OC ‘world’s sustainability capital’

The Orange County Register -
“Over the next year-and-a-half we will be designing, building, and testing a 1,200-square foot Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) that is carbon-neutral, resilient, affordable, water- and energy-efficient, and of course attractive and comfortable,” says the website for Team M.A.D.E.-OC — “Modular Affordable Dwellings for the Environment” — which pairs up Orange Coast College and UCI’s School of Engineering. … UCI/OCC project lead [and UCI director of special projects] Jennifer Wilkens said Team M.A.D.E.-OC is in the early stages of recruiting students and faculty mentors, and beginning schematic design. [Subscription required, campus-wide access provided by UCI Libraries. Sign-up here: https://guides.lib.uci.edu/news/ocregister] Read More
ABC 7

New assessment tool shows Bay Area counties with highest wildfire risk

KABC San Francisco -
While doing things to protect your home will help, the study concluded that a community-wide effort is needed to create a real firewall. One option is to greatly increase the number of controlled burns, according to a study released out of UC Irvine. "Our study shows that winter and spring are feasible times of the year that more prescribed burns should be done to help mitigate these extreme wildfires that we could see in the future," said Janine Ann Baijnath-Rodino [postdoctoral scholar] with UC Irvine's Environmental Engineering Department. Read More
PhysOrg

Research recommends extending California's prescribed burning season

Phys.org -
"California's wildfires have been getting worse every year in recent decades, owing to factors such as climate change and a century-long fire deficit coupled with a buildup of vegetation and fuels," said study leader Tirtha Banerjee, UCI assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering. "Prescribed burns can help alleviate this problem, but only if they're done with adequate frequency and over a large enough territory in the places where they are needed." Read More
Drug Discovery News

Shrinking toys inspire diagnostics and wearable sensors of the future

Drug Discovery News -
At the height of their popularity in the 1980s, no one could have guessed that Shrinky Dinks would inspire tiny diagnostic tests or sensors to detect changes in a person’s health. While these inexpensive and easy-to-access toys may have started as a childhood pastime for Michelle Khine, a bioengineer at the University of California (UC), Irvine, they became her inspiration for a new way to diagnose and monitor disease. Read More

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