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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (May 18, 2004) -- While companies, universities and
government agencies become increasingly dependent on fast-growing, data-intensive
computer networks, Tennessee Tech Universitys Xubin He is conducting
award-winning research on how large amounts of data can be stored and
transferred more securely, quickly and reliably.
As one of the nations most promising junior faculty members, He,
a TTU assistant electrical and computer engineering professor, has brought
recognition and grant money to Tennessee Tech by being named a 2004 Ralph
E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award winner by Oak Ridge Associated
Universities.
At TTU, He created the Storage Technology and Architecture Research Laboratory,
or STAR Lab, to promote research in data storage. In the past decade,
faster processors and increased network bandwidth have allowed a cluster,
which is a collection of computers, to perform as well as a dedicated
computer but at lower cost. Meanwhile, a bottleneck occurs because of
the slow transfer rate between the computers and storage devices.
At the STAR Lab, He introduced a three-level hierarchy of storage that
reduces the botteneck and increases the speed, reliability and security
of the data transfer process. Working with Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
he has introduced this multi-layer, distributed shared IP storage
system that features a small storage level for retrieval of frequently
accessed data, an intermediate larger level for cache and an even larger
storage area for backup data.
Think of trying to find your keys in a small house as opposed to
a large house, said He. The smaller the area you have to search,
the more quickly you will find what you are looking for. The same concept
works in the hierarchy of data storage. We place data in different storage
levels depending on how frequently the data is needed and how secure it
needs to be.
Deploying data over a network with networked storage brings economy and
convenience, but it also raises performance and reliability issues which
are addressed in Hes research.
Security will be the most pressing issue in data storage in the
long run, said He. As technology improves, other elements
such as speed, storage capacity and network bandwidth can increase, but
security issues on a network are harder to solve as the volume of data
increases and hardware and software challenges arise.
The continued collaboration with ORNL will allow He access to network
clusters made up of dozens, even hundreds, of computers so that he and
his graduate students can work on improving network security.
He earned his doctorate in electrical engineering in 2002 at the University
of Rhode Island, after receiving his masters and bachelors
degrees from Huazhong University of Science and Technology in the People's
Republic of China. Specializing in network and database security, he ranked
first in his undergraduate and graduate class.
In the past 3 years, He has authored or co-authored more than a dozen
refereed articles for professional journals and conference proceedings
and filed two joint U.S patents. During his university career, he received
several national and worldwide scholarships including a Siemens International
Student Scholarship and Computer World Scholarship.
Ralph E. Powe Awards provide seed money to allow faculty members in their
first two years of tenure track to enhance their research. He received
a $5,000 unrestricted research award that will be matched by TTU. This
year, 24 winners were chosen from almost 100 applicants.
Oak Ridge Associated Universities, one of the nations most respected
university consortiums to advance science and education, has awarded more
than 230 grants totaling more than $1 million in the last 14 years. The
88 major research institutions join national laboratories, government
agencies and private industry to advance science and education.
Titus Albu, a TTU assistant chemistry professor, received a Powe award
last year for his fuel cell research.-30-
--Karen Lykins
This information posted 18 May 2004
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