It's a smart new world, and Michigan Tech students have the life saving, game-changing technology-shaping ideas to propel us forward. Viva la research revolution.
Infrastructure
Removing Synthetic Chemicals
Student: Jennifer Julien
Human waste is chock full of pharmaceuticals, and Julien is looking for the cleanest
way to take them out and improve wastewater treatment.
Retrofitting a Rail Shunt
Students: Samuel Scott, Frank BeFay, Sean Massey, Alexander Pate
Retrofits are never ideal, but they are necessary to improve the safety of modern
American railways. Better understanding the electrical properties of shunt connection
systems is one step forward.
Swapping Aluminum
Students: Annie LeSage, Alexandra Glover, Kyle Myszka, Jacob Gerdt
Cars are heavy, so some auto companies are changing over copper wiring harnesses to
aluminum alloys to make them lighter. A Senior Design team in Materials Science and
Engineering worked with Yazaki to test this swap.
Plugging Into Smart Grids
Students: Jaya Yellajosula, Elizaveta Egorova, Zagros Shahooei, Gabriel Sousa, Matheus
Freitas, Junior Castro
Do you think about how electricity gets to your light switch when you flip it on?
The students in Bruce Mork’s and Sumit Paudyal’s power grid lab do. In fact, these
students working in the Power and Energy Resource Center (PERC) plug into control
consoles, test live transformers, and seek out internal faults. The faster a fault
is detected, Egorova says, the less damage to a transformer will be inflicted. As
our utility infrastructure ages, fails, improves, and changes, these students will
help figure out how to smartly power the world.
Gathering Around Geothermal
Students: Edward Louie and the Alternative Energy Enterprise
Mining is an important part of the Keweenaw’s history. Now, an interdisciplinary team
of more than ten students is looking at how to tap into minewater reservoir for geothermal
heating and cooling.
Building Underwater Robots to Monitor Pipelines
Students: Levi Rhody, Buck Poszywak
Preventing Bird-Window Collisions
Students: Michigan Tech Chapter of the Wildlife Society
Connecting People and Geohazards
Students: Geoscience students in the Peace Corps Master’s International Program
Designing a Better Car Console
Students: Humane Interface Design
Dynamic Environment
Warming Up Roots
Student: Peter Hoch
Tree roots are sensitive to small changes in temperature. Hoch studies how rising
temps impact sugar maple roots, microbial activity, and the nutrients bound up in
the soil.
Interpreting Data Into Sound
Students: Tom Conran, Paul Kirby, Collin Doerr-Newton, Mason Pew
Sound design isn’t just for movies. These students interpreted wolf population data
from Isle Royale and turned it into interactive audio.
Understanding the Decrease in the UP's Hunting and Fishing
Student: Chris Henderson
Neutralizing the Campus Carbon Footprint
Students: Green Campus Enterprise
Preventing Bird-Window Collisions
Students: Michigan Tech Chapter of the Wildlife Society
Tracking Macrophytes and Stamp Sands in the Keweenaw Waterway
Student: Ryan Van Goethem
Figuring Out the Impacts of Extra Nitrogen on Plants and Pollinators
Student: Virginia Van Vianen
Technology
Polymerizing Fish Scales
Student: Xu Xiang
Finding ways to deliver pharmaceutical drugs using new materials is an everyday task
for Xiang, who modified fish scales using polymers to better understand their nanomechanical
properties.
Delivering A Dynamo
Students: Kristopher Benaglio, Christopher DeGroot, Adam Deibler, Kenneth Smith
Calibrating a dynamometer is an essential part of many mechanical engineering tests.
This Senior Design team hammered out a design for John Deere to make the device more
transportable, expanding the testing range.
Programming The Mind Music Machine
Students: Steven Landry, Paul Kirby, Joseph Ryan
Teaching a machine to learn is tricky. Teaching a machine to read human emotions is
even harder. But that’s what these interdisciplinary computer science and cognitive
science students do.
Coloring Emotions
Student: Zhine Kang
As technology gets smarter, we hope to tune it into our emotions. Kang is toying with
how to make a room’s color change based on physical mood indicators like blood pressure
and breathing rate.
Interpreting Data Into Sound
Students: Tom Conran, Paul Kirby, Collin Doerr-Newton, Mason Pew
Sound design isn’t just for movies. These students interpreted wolf population data
from Isle Royale and turned it into interactive audio.
Teasing Apart The Properties Of Titanium Dioxide Nanocomposites
Student: Kevin Rocheleau
Protecting Computer Test Data With A Buffer Box
Students: Sylvia Ferragut, Caleb Wright, Ben Veltman, Matthew Zawisza
Building Underwater Robots To Monitor Pipelines
Students: Levi Rhody, Buck Poszywak
Making Science Fun
Students: Mind Trekkers student volunteers
Playing Music With Heat On Carbon Nanotube Speakers
Students: Troy Bouman, Mahsa Asgarisabet
Sorting Out Smart Bins For Kimberly-Clark
Students: Louis Bersine, Jake Fiebing, Yuancheng He, Kaiquan Wang
Worlds Beyond
Compiling Geospatial Data Above And Below Water
Students: Digital Mapping Enterprise
Making Science Fun
Students: Mind Trekkers student volunteers
Blasting Off Satellites
Students: Andrew Conley and the Aerospace Enterprise
In 2016, more than 60 Michigan Tech students will help send the Oculus-ASR Nanosatellite
into orbit. The team leads the nation’s winning project in the Air Force Research
Laboratory’s University Nanosatellite competition. Once in orbit, the Oculus-ARS will
complete a one-year nominal mission—completely controlled from the Michigan Tech campus.
Brad King advises the enterprise and admits that while the project is huge, the efforts
of Conley and his crew are taking undergraduate education to new heights.
Health
Discovering Macromolecules
Students: Melanie Talaga, Ni Fan, Ashli Fueri, Robert Brown, Kevin Lawry, Ramandeep
Rekhi, Alexander Vizurraga
Lysins are the jackhammers of the microscopic world. These heavy-duty macromolecules—usually
proteins or peptides—punch holes in living cells, killing them. We use them in our
guts to destroy unwanted bacteria. Some fungi and invertebrates make them, but bacteria
are the main source of lysins. Now, Researcher Tarun Dam and his students in the chemistry
department have found a new source of lysins. Surprisingly, they’re in plants. Having
a better understanding of these macromolecules could pave the way for improved disease
and cancer treatments.
Polymerizing Fish Scales
Student: Xu Xiang
Finding ways to deliver pharmaceutical drugs using new materials is an everyday better
understand their nanomechanical properties.
Clearing Blood Clots With 3-D Printing
Students: Kathleen Ikeda, Alexandria Bartlett, Alexis Alvarez, Mark Keranen, Kyle Johnston
Michigan Technological University is a public research university founded in 1885 in Houghton, Michigan, and is home to nearly 7,500 students from more than 60 countries around the world. Consistently ranked among the best universities in the country for return on investment, Michigan’s flagship technological university offers more than 120 undergraduate and graduate degree programs in science and technology, engineering, computing, forestry, business, health professions, humanities, mathematics, social sciences, and the arts. The rural campus is situated just miles from Lake Superior in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, offering year-round opportunities for outdoor adventure.