25 episodes

This Purdue University College of Engineering podcast series provides a vibrantly personal overview for the college’s extended community: faculty, students, alumni and partners locally and globally. Voices of expertise and imagination will bring today’s listeners to campus, at the intersection of an academic event celebrating past accomplishments and a launch of Purdue Engineering Initiatives addressing future challenges – from autonomous vehicles to the Internet of Things, from medical frontiers to data security. Podcast episodes will update diverse audiences through dialogues with renowned engineers making change happen. Conversations will invite engagement with a college that has a legacy of service and continues to take giant leaps.

Boilermaker Engineering Engenuity Podcast Purdue University College of Engineering

    • Education
    • 5.0 • 1 Rating

This Purdue University College of Engineering podcast series provides a vibrantly personal overview for the college’s extended community: faculty, students, alumni and partners locally and globally. Voices of expertise and imagination will bring today’s listeners to campus, at the intersection of an academic event celebrating past accomplishments and a launch of Purdue Engineering Initiatives addressing future challenges – from autonomous vehicles to the Internet of Things, from medical frontiers to data security. Podcast episodes will update diverse audiences through dialogues with renowned engineers making change happen. Conversations will invite engagement with a college that has a legacy of service and continues to take giant leaps.

    Student-driven innovation ignites campus: Haddy Alchaer and Zoe Slatkin

    Student-driven innovation ignites campus: Haddy Alchaer and Zoe Slatkin

    At Purdue, classroom, lab and seminar learning is the springboard for a student’s deep dive into their passions. Purdue students are not only excelling in foundational tenets taught in that traditional academic setting — they are spilling out after class to join or start clubs and organizations, collaborating across disciplines with other students and faculty, entering national and international competitions, and hosting national expos in their fields. They are developing professionally by learning hands-on at industry level via internships and experiential Co-ops, and launching research and startups to take their pursuits to a whole new level. This episode of Engenuity features two students, Haddy Alchaer and Zoe Slatkin, who are taking part in the intellectual and innovation ferment — in their case, in space and robotics — that is bubbling across the Purdue campus.

    • 24 min
    Building a Semiconductor Ecosystem: Mark Lundstrom

    Building a Semiconductor Ecosystem: Mark Lundstrom

    Semiconductors and chips are at the heart of everything we do. They are some of the most fiendishly complex engineered devices ever built, and are getting even more complex as we race to develop chips with mind-boggling power to fuel artificial intelligence. Chips are also a national security priority, which is why the CHIPS Act aims to onshore, or near shore, semiconductor manufacturing. This is all in Purdue’s wheelhouse, as America’s “Semiconductor University.” Mark Lundstrom, Purdue’s chief semiconductor officer, draws upon his 50 years in the field to discuss technologies like advanced packaging that are driving sector innovation forward; the challenges to building out an enduring semiconductor ecosystem in the United States; and how Purdue is tackling the No. 1 industry challenge — workforce development — by leading an urgent, ambitious effort to educate engineers and skilled technicians for the most sophisticated and foundational technology we humans manufacture.

    • 19 min
    Breathing new life into U.S. infrastructure: Luna Lu

    Breathing new life into U.S. infrastructure: Luna Lu

    It’s widely agreed by all that United States infrastructure is in dire need of improvement, getting low grades like C- and D- in various studies. Luna Lu wants to make our aging infrastructure “smarter.” She’s leveraging the Internet of Things via her smart, materials-based sensor technology and novel, interpretive data-processing methods, enabling infrastructure to monitor and wirelessly communicate its condition with current and actionable information so we can detect problems earlier and mitigate them. This can vastly improve infrastructure maintenance and modernization, so our roads and bridges can keep commerce and people moving safely and efficiently and the American economy humming.
    And Lu, the Reilly Professor of Civil Engineering in the Lyles School of Civil Engineering at Purdue, isn’t done with her innovation journey — her sensor-based testing technology is gaining wider use across other sectors, and next on her agenda is investigating the manufacture of plant-based cement to provide not only carbon neutrality but a carbon-negative construction material that can absorb CO2 in permanent storage.

    • 15 min
    Transformation of First-Year Engineering with ENE's Donna Riley

    Transformation of First-Year Engineering with ENE's Donna Riley

    In this episode, we’ll have a conversation with Dr. Donna Riley, the Kamyar Haghighi Head of Engineering Education and discuss the origin of the first School of Engineering Education in the world, the transformation of our First-Year Engineering program, and how we adapted to the Covid-19 pandemic. 
    Dr. Riley shares about the founder of Purdue's School of Engineering Education, Kamyar Haghighi and his vision for the first School of Engineering Education in the world.  She also discusses the research based approach used to transform the First-Year Engineering program to increase student engagement and retention. 
    Prior to becoming Head of the Purdue’s School of Engineering Education Dr. Riley was Professor and Interim Head in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. From 2013 to 2015, she served as Program Director for Engineering Education at the National Science Foundation (NSF). Riley spent thirteen years as a founding faculty member of the Picker Engineering Program at Smith College, the first engineering program at a U.S. women’s college.  Riley earned a B.S.E. in chemical engineering from Princeton University and a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University in Engineering and Public Policy. She is a fellow of the American Society for Engineering Education.  See full bio. 

    • 29 min
    Reducing Head Injuries in Sports with Eric Nauman

    Reducing Head Injuries in Sports with Eric Nauman

    Eric Nauman, a professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University discusses his work to reduce head injuries in sports.

    • 16 min
    Autonomous Underwater Docking with Nina Mahmoudian

    Autonomous Underwater Docking with Nina Mahmoudian

    Nina Mahmoudian, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University shares about her work with controlling individual and multiple autonomous vehicles in harsh dynamic environments, addressing challenges that currently limit the use of autonomous vehicles in unknown complex situations.

    • 13 min

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