Coulter School of Engineering Newsletter: April 2024

Message From the Dean

Greetings from Clarkson University, and welcome to the April edition of the Coulter School of Engineering Newsletter. As the academic year nears its end, we are proud to announce that two of our assistant professors are the recipients of the prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER award. We also share news of a new faculty-published book on composite materials, NSF funding for a conference recently held on campus and news about our innovative students' latest activities. I hope you enjoy reading about the students and faculty I am proud to work with daily.

— Bill Jemison, Dean of the Wallace H. Coulter School of Engineering / Tony Collins Professor of Innovative Engineering Culture

NSF CAREER Award

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Shoulders-up portrait of Leo Jiang in a light blue, open-collar shirt

Assistant Professor of Electrical &Computer Engineering Yazhou “Leo” Jiang received the National Science Foundation's most prestigious award for early-career faculty who serve as academic role models in research and education. The CAREER Award will provide $500,000 in funding for his research on managing uncertainties in renewable-powered grids.|
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NSF CAREER Award

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Chest-up outdoor portrait of Ian McCrum in a blue sports coat and read tie

Assistant Professor of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering Ian McCrum has received the National Science Foundation's most prestigious award for early-career faculty who serve as academic role models in research and education. The CAREER Award will provide $601,000 in funding for research to enable the production of fully sustainable and carbon-neutral chemicals.
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Composite Materials E-Book

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Chest-up portrait of Ioannis Mastorakos in blue button-up sweater and checkered, open-collar shirt

Associate Professor of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Ioannis Mastorakos has co-published an e-book on composite materials. Composite Materials: Sustainable and Eco-Friendly Materials and Application is part of a collection covering innovations in composite materials with a specific focus on eco-friendly and environmentally sustainable systems.
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NSF Funding Enables Complex Systems Experts to Meet

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Summer exterior drone shot of the Center for Advanced Materials Processing building with the sun setting in the background over green trees

Four professors are the co-principal investigators on an NSF grant that funded the organization of the Seventh Northeast Regional Conference on Complex Systems, which was held at Clarkson in March. The grant allowed the University to offer travel awards to students, postdoctoral researchers and early-career faculty and researchers.
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