| Metal casting REU funded by NSF offers undergrads opportunities | ||||||||||||||
|
COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (March 7, 2006) — A U.S. multi-billion dollar
industry struggling to keep jobs in the country while casting a more
high-tech image will get a boost from a new research program for engineering
undergraduates beginning this summer. Select students will participate in high-tech research opportunities
in the seemingly low-tech world of metal casting, an industry suffering
as a result of foreign competition and lack of research innovation. While
the United States is the world's largest producer of cast products, it
currently needs more technologically skilled and knowledgeable professionals. "The metal casting industry is one of the few industries where
the specific product being manufactured is not measured during the course
of its manufacture, which is akin to measuring the stove, but not the
food until cooked," explained Mohamed Abdelrahman, a TTU electrical
and computer engineering professor and co-investigator of the program. "This
industry is a field fertile with research opportunities. "We will help students conduct research focusing on increasing
the competitiveness of the U.S. metal casting industry, reducing energy
consumption and environmental impact and changing the image of this field," he
said. TTU's nine-week program, Research Experiences for Undergraduates, or
REU, is one of only a handful of REU sites funded by NSF each year; this
year's recipients include the University of Notre Dame, University of
California at Berkley and Virginia Tech. Ten students, five from TTU and five from other universities, will be
paired with a mentor from the university or metal casting industry to
work on projects complementing two major research projects already underway.
Working one-on-one with a mentor, each student will choose a project
investigating different sensing technologies, modeling of physical processes
and automatic control of the casting process. The program offers each
student a stipend of more than $5,700. Casting is a very old process, and to a casual observer, the environment
of a foundry looks very low-tech, But to stay competitive and keep jobs
in the United States, the industry requires technical experience in fields
including computer-aided manufacturing and robotics. Sally Pardue, TTU mechanical engineering professor and co-investigator,
explained how the REU offers students an attractive opportunity to engineering
undergraduates on different levels. "This generation of college students is strongly motivated by service," said
Pardue. "This type of research links the need to help and the ability
to help conserve energy, benefit the environment and save jobs. "Plus, the project involves students and mentors from electrical,
mechanical and chemical engineering, along with manufacturing and industrial
technology," she said. "That multidisciplinary approach means
that the challenges the industry is facing can be addressed from each
of these angles." TTU's current research collaborations include those with Oak Ridge National
Laboratory and several industrial partners. Some students will have access
to ORNL or industry facilities during the program. More than 90 percent of all U.S. manufactured goods and capital equipment
use metal castings as engineered components or rely on castings for their
manufacture. The process is often described as the shortest distance
between raw material and finished product, and that efficiency makes
it a viable technology into the future. "We realize the need of the metal casting industry for a well-trained
and educated workforce that is capable of transforming not only the image,
but also the reality, of the industry to a high-tech one," said
Abdelrahman. This is the second REU at TTU to receive NSF funding; last year, ECE faculty members Ben He and Nasir Ghani launched a similar program focusing on telecommunications research. Because of the highly competitive nature of the funding process, both Abdelrahman and Pardue agree that establishing funded REUs increases the visibility, reputation and prestige of the university. For more information, visit www.tntech.edu/cmr/new/REUSite.html.
|
|
|||||||||||||