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A University of Houston engineer has designed a model to guide better design of thin-walled structures – such as planes, cars and submersibles – to avoid catastrophe like sudden collapse, from buckling.

Last summer when the Titan submersible suffered a catastrophic implosion on its way to take passengers to see the Titanic shipwreck it was a dramatic example of the failure of a thin-walled structure. Those structures, which may be in the shapes of spherical or cylindrical shells, can efficiently carry relatively large loads, but their slenderness makes them susceptible to buckling-induced collapse.

The submersible is not the only thin-walled structure you may interact with. Whenever you step into a car or hop aboard a plane, you are entering one. They all looked perfectly formed on the drawing board, but when manufactured, they don't all come out quite so perfectly and can contain geometric imperfections. The structures will buckle at much smaller forces because of these imperfections than they would if they were perfectly shaped.

Detrimental effects of geometric imperfections

Until now it's been impossible to accurately predict the detrimental effects of geometric imperfections, but Roberto Ballarini, Thomas and Laura Hsu Professor and department chair of Civil and Environmental Engineering, is changing that. He reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) a theoretical equation, based on the results of computer simulations, that predicts the average buckling strength of a shell based on the parameters that describe the imperfections.

Of course, advanced maths is involved. "We derived equations that allow us to predict the resistance to buckling of structures in terms of the parameters that are involved including the shapes and distribution of their imperfections," said Ballarini. "Given the parameters that describe the imperfections, the equations we constructed using the results of the simulations 'spit out' the average buckling resistance of the structures."

Ballarini coauthored the PNAS paper with doctoral student Zheren Baizhikova and Jia-Liang Le, a professor at the University of Minnesota.

"Localised deformation and randomly shaped imperfections are salient features of buckling type instabilities in thin-walled load-bearing structures. However, it is generally agreed that their complex interactions in response to mechanical loading are not yet sufficiently understood, as evidenced by buckling-induced catastrophic failures which continue today," the authors wrote.

Ballarini added: "One must not forget that a structure's resistance to buckling failure is also affected by the strength and stiffness of the material from which it is made."

Consider for example the tragic failure of the Titan submersible. "Its integrity may have been compromised by the damage to the material used for its hull that accumulated during the many trips it took prior to collapse," said Ballarini. "The material used for the Titan's hull was a carbon fibre composite.

"It is well known that under compression, loading the fibres in such composites are susceptible to micro-buckling and that they may delaminate from the matrix that surrounds them.

"If the Titan's hull experienced such damage under the extreme compressive pressures it experienced during its dives, then its stiffness and strength would have significantly decreased, and together with the inevitable geometric imperfections introduced during its manufacturing, may have contributed to its buckling-induced implosion." 

For a given shell, buckling initiates where the geometric imperfection is most severe, and since the spatial distribution of geometric imperfections is random, so is the location of the initial buckling zone.

"This randomness has profound implications for the statistics of the critical buckling pressure of the shell," said Ballarini, whose computer simulations and theoretical analysis allowed the research team to craft a probabilistic model for the statistical distribution of buckling resistance that offers promise for creating lightweight and sustainable structures while ensuring their structural reliability without unnecessary over-design.

Under examination: Buckling – when structures fall apart all of a sudden

Neurological disorders affect the brain, spinal cord, and nerves throughout the body, and in severe cases, they can impact specific muscle movement. This makes it harder for people with these conditions to perform tasks ranging from handwriting and holding a knife and fork, to walking.

Therapy can be vital to help people with these conditions improve their motor skills, and research in robotics is ongoing to support and enhance treatment.

Not only could robotic techniques potentially supplement or enhance traditional therapy practices, but by reducing the demand on therapy services, the technology could also help to reduce patient waiting times.

Robot-assisted therapy for neurological disorders involves the patient touching and manipulating a physical control interface in response to robotic feedback in a process called haptic interaction.

Dr Aaron Yurkewich, assistant professor, Ontario Tech University, explained: “A robot provides a specific, measured force that the patient resists, or alternatively, that assists the patient. Through these exercises, the goal is for the patient to adapt over time, so when you take the force away, you can measure how the person responds under normal conditions.”

Investigating human neuromechanics and robotic rehabilitation

Research into the value of robotic interaction for patient assessment and therapy is ongoing, with positive results emerging. To consolidate and progress the study, Aaron and his colleagues lldar Farkhatdinov, Kings College London, as well as Joshua Brown and Etienne Burdet, both of Imperial College London, have formed the startup business, Human Robotix.

The team has developed new robotic interface and studied its use to study human neuromuscular system and treat the effects of stroke, the most common neurological disorder for adults. The designed modular robot enables researchers to investigate how the technology can assess and provide therapy for people with cerebral palsy, the most prevalent neurological condition in children.

Developing a system that could be available to practitioners and patients, the robot has to be compact and portable and able to be used in the research lab, clinic, or home. To fit these needs, the Human Robotix team has developed the HRX-1.

The neuromechanics robot is based around a hand- or foot-controlled grip that the patient moves, with the aim of tracking a target displayed on a screen.

Resistance or assistance in tracking the target is provided by the robot, which can be controlled by the therapist or researcher. The grip can also move freely, with no additional forces, to replicate normal, real-world conditions. The robot is modular and reconfigurable for wrist, elbow, and ankle, as well as bi-manual operation settings involving both upper and lower limbs.

Feedback achieves the right assistance-resistance balance

The system also pairs with an electromyography (EMG) unit to measure muscle effort and an electroencephalography (EEG) device that measures brain activity. Depending on this feedback, the assistance or resistance that the robot provides can be varied accordingly.

“When you add robotic assistance to rehabilitation, you want it to be an encouraging force, but you don’t want it to make all the effort for you because the patient isn’t going to get any kind of benefit,” says Aaron. “With feedback, we can control the robot to provide the right balance of assistance, until eventually, it can provide the right level of resistance to encourage patient adaptations.”

The motor is central to the assistance and resistance that the robot can provide. Up to 4Nm pulse torque is required to test a patient’s maximum strength, and precise control is also essential to achieve fine adjustment to torque and position.

Young Engineers Program

With support from maxon’s Young Engineers Program that supports projects from universities and start-ups around the world, Human Robotix specified maxon’s EC90 brushless DC motor, combined with a maxon EPOS4 position controller. This drive system provides torque resolution to 0.014Nm and position sensing down to just 0.01°.

The motor also needed back drive operation to allow patients free control with no assistive or resistive force, essential to establish a benchmark of regular condition operation.

For the robot to operate as a tabletop system, low motor height is also crucial. 

“Most tables aren’t adjustable, and to use the robot, the patient’s arms have to be positioned at a certain level, so another key reason we chose maxon’s EC90 flat motor was to minimise height, thanks to its compact, flat design,” says Aaron.

To use the robot with a patient, the HRX-1 has three different levels of control, based on the set-up time and programming expertise of each user, who could range from a physiotherapy clinician, to an engineering researcher.

Time-pressed clinicians, for example, can use the robot’s three-button control pad to select assistance, resistance, or no resistance modes. Alternatively, to refine control to the most precise level, the robot integrates with the MATLAB Simulink graphical programming environment.

“With the MATLAB Simulink level of control, the user can include algorithms for various stages of the exercises, commanding when, and how much, assistance or resistance will be provided,” said Aaron.

“We also have students working on AI, investigating the potential of taking signals from the brain, muscles, or directly from the motor encoder, to adapt the assistance or resistance while the exercises are taking place.”

Increasing the volume and quality of care

The robot is undergoing medical trials with settings such as Schön Klinik Bad Aibling, Germany, Evelina London, part of Guy’s and St. Thomas’ NHS Trust, and other institutions worldwide. Research includes using two systems at once to simulate bi-manual activities such as opening a jar, combined robotic and functional electrical stimulation therapy.

“Working on this project is so fulfilling because you can see the benefit, both to the patient and the clinician,” said Aaron. “Often, the clinician is struggling to provide as much therapy as they would like to, to keep up with demand, while for the patient, they might only be able to receive rehab when they’re with the therapist. With our robot, the HRX-1 has the potential to increase both the volume and quality of care.”

 

Robots enhance limb therapy for patients with neurological conditions

Undergrads, take note: The lessons you learn in those intro classes could be the key to making your next big discovery. At least, that’s been the case for MIT’s Jeehwan Kim.

A recently tenured faculty member in MIT’s departments of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering, Kim has made numerous discoveries about the nanostructure of materials and is funneling them directly into the advancement of next-generation electronics.

His research aims to push electronics past the inherent limits of silicon – a material that has reliably powered transistors and most other electronic elements but is reaching a performance limit as more computing power is packed into ever smaller devices. 

'For me, free thinking – to compose music, innovate something totally new – is the most important thing. And the people at MIT are very talented and curious of all the things,' says Jeehwan Kim. Photo: Jake Belcher'.

Today, Kim and his students are exploring materials, devices, and systems that could take over where silicon leaves off. Kim is applying his insights to design next-generation devices, including low-power, high-performance transistors and memory devices, artificial intelligence chips, ultra-high-definition micro-LED displays, and flexible electronic 'skin'. Ultimately, he envisions such beyond-silicon devices could be built into supercomputers small enough to fit in your pocket.

The innovations that have come out of his research are recorded in more than 200 issued US patents and 70 research papers – an extensive list that he and his students continue to grow.

Kim credits many of his breakthroughs to the fundamentals he learnt in his university days. In fact, he has carried his college textbooks and notes with him with every move. Today, he keeps the undergraduate notes – written in a light and meticulous graphite and ink – on a shelf nearest to his desk, close at hand. He references them in his own class lectures and presentations, and when brainstorming research solutions.

“These textbooks are all in my brain now,” says Kim. “I’ve learnt that if you completely understand the fundamentals, you can solve any problem.”

Jeehwan Kim aims to push electronics past silicon, whose performance faces limits as more computing power is packed into ever-smaller devices. His group is exploring materials, devices, and systems that could take over where silicon leaves off. Photo: Jake Belcher.

Fundamental shift

Kim wasn’t always a model student. Growing up in Seoul, South Korea, he was fixed on a musical career. He had a passion for singing and was bored by most other high school subjects.

“It was very monotonic,” says Kim. “My motivation for high school subjects was very low.”

After graduating from secondary school, he enrolled in a materials science programme at Hongik University, where he was lucky to met professors who had graduated from MIT and who later motivated him to study in the United States. But, Kim spent his first year there trying to make it as a musician. He wrote and sang songs that he recorded and sent to promoters, and went to multiple auditions. But after a year, he was faced with no call-backs, and a hard question.

“What should I do? It was a crisis to me,” says Kim.

In his second year, he decided to give materials science a go. When he sat in on his first class, he was surprised to find that the subject – the structure and behaviour of materials at the atomic scale – made him want to learn more.

“My first year, my GPA was almost zero because I didn’t attend class, and was going to be kicked out,” says Kim. “Then from my second year on, I really loved every single subject in materials science. People who saw me in the library were surprised: ‘what are you doing here, without a guitar?’ I must have read these textbooks more than 10 times, and felt I really understood everything fundamental.”

Kim is applying his insights to design next-generation devices, including low-power, high performance transistors and memory devices, artificial intelligence chips, ultra-high-definition micro-LED displays, and flexible electronic 'skin'. Ultimately, he envisions such beyond-silicon devices could be built into supercomputers small enough to fit in your pocket. Photo: Jake Belcher.

Back to basics

He took this new-found passion to Seoul National University, where he enrolled in the materials science master’s programme and learnt to apply the ideas he absorbed to hands-on research problems. Metallurgy was a dominant field at the time, and Kim was assigned to experiment with high-temperature alloys – mixing and melting metallic powders to create materials that could be used in high-performance engines.

After completing his master’s, Kim wanted to continue with a PhD, overseas. But to do so, he first had to serve in the military. He spent the next two-and-a-half years in the Korean air force, helping to maintain and refuel aircraft, and inventory their parts. All the while, he prepared applications to graduate schools abroad.

In 2003, after completing his service, he headed overseas, where he was accepted to the materials science graduate programme at the University of California at Los Angeles with a fellowship.

“When I came out of the airplane and went to the dorm for the first day, people were drinking Corona on the balcony, playing music, and there was beautiful weather, and I thought, this is where I’m supposed to be!” Kim recalls.

For his PhD, he began to dive into the microscopic world of electronic materials, seeking ways to manipulate them to make faster electronics. The subject was a focus for his adviser, who previously worked at Bell Labs, where many computing innovations originated at the time.

“A lot of the papers I was reading were from Bell Labs, and IBM TJ Watson, and I was so impressed, and thought: I really want to be a scientist there. That was my dream,” says Kim.

During his PhD programme, he reached out to a scientist at IBM whose name kept coming up in the papers Kim was reading. In his initial letter, Kim wrote with a question about his own PhD work, which tackled a hard industry problem: how to stretch, or 'strain', silicon to minimise defects that would occur as more transistors are packed on a chip. 

The query opened a dialogue, and Kim eventually inquired and was accepted to an internship at the IBM TJ Watson Research Center, just outside New York City. Soon after he arrived, his manager pitched him a challenge: he might be hired full time if he could solve a new, harder problem, having to do with replacing silicon.

Germanium as a possible successor to silicon

At the time, the electronics industry was looking to germanium as a possible successor to silicon. The material can conduct electrons at even smaller scales, which would enable germanium to be made into even tinier transistors, for faster, smaller, and more powerful devices. But there was no reliable way for germanium to be 'doped' – an essential process that replaces some of a material’s atoms with another type of atom in a way that controls how electrons flow through the material.

“My manager told me he didn’t expect me to solve this. But I really wanted the job,” says Kim. “So day and night, I thought, how to solve this? And I always went back to the textbooks.”

Those textbooks reminded him of a fundamental rule: replacing one atom with another would work well if both atoms were of similar size. This revelation triggered an idea. Perhaps germanium could be doped with a combination of two different atoms with an average atomic size that is similar to germanium’s.

“I came up with this idea, and right after, IBM showed that it worked. I was so amazed,” says Kim. “From that point, research became my passion. I did it because it was just so fun. Singing is not so different from performing research.”

As promised, he was hired as a postdoc and soon after, promoted to research staff member – a title he carried, literally, with pride.

“I was feeling so happy to be there,” says Kim. “I even wore my IBM badge to restaurants, and everywhere I went.”

Throughout his time at IBM, he learnt to focus on research that directly impacts everyday human life, and how to apply the fundamentals to develop next-generation products.

“IBM really raised me up as an engineer who can identify the problems in an industry and find creative solutions to tackle the challenges,” he says.

Cycle of life

And yet, Kim felt he could do more. He was working on boundary-pushing research at one of the leading innovation hubs in the country, where 'out-of-the-box' thinking was encouraged, and experimentally tested. But he wanted to explore beyond the company’s research portfolio, and also, find a way to pursue research not just as a profession but as a passion.

“My experience taught me that you can lead a very happy life as an engineer or scientist if your research becomes your hobby,” says Kim. “I wanted to teach this cycle – of happiness, research, and passion – to young people and help PhD students develop like artists or singers.”

In 2015, he packed his bags for MIT, where he accepted a junior faculty position in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. His first impressions upon arriving at the institute? “Freedom,” says Kim. “For me, free thinking – to compose music, innovate something totally new – is the most important thing. And the people at MIT are very talented and curious of all the things.”

Since he’s put down roots on campus, he has built up a highly productive research group, focused on fabricating ultra-thin, stackable, high-performance electronic materials and devices, which Kim envisions could be used to build hybrid electronic systems as small as a fingernail and as powerful as a supercomputer. He credits the group’s many innovations to the more than 40 students, postdocs, and research scientists who have contributed to his lab.

“I hope this is where they can learn that research can be an art,” says Kim. “To students especially, I hope they see that, if they enjoy what they do, then they can be whatever they want to be.”

Getting better electronics by pushing material boundaries

There's a patch of concrete on Drexel University's campus that could portend a frost-free future for paths and highways in the US Northeast. Tucked inconspicuously next to a parking lot for the university's facilities vehicles, two 30in-by-30in slabs have been warding off snow, sleet and freezing rain on their own – without shovelling, salting or scraping – for a little more than three years. 

Researchers in Drexel's College of Engineering, recently reported on the science behind the special concrete, that can warm itself up when it snows, or as temperatures approach freezing. 

By introducing phase-change materials to the concrete mixture, Drexel researcher were able to create slabs that can warm themselves to melt snow and ice when temperatures approach freezing.

Self-heating concrete, like Drexel's, is the latest in an ongoing effort to create more environmentally responsive and resilient infrastructure, particularly in the northern regions of the United States, where the National Highway Administration estimates states spend $2.3bn on snow and ice removal operations each year and millions to repair roadways damaged by winter weather. 

"One way to extend the service life of a concrete surfaces, like roadways, is to help them maintain a surface temperature above freezing during the winter," says Amir Farnam, PhD, an associate professor in the College of Engineering whose Advanced Infrastructure Materials Lab has been leading the research.

"Preventing freezing and thawing and cutting back on the need for ploughing and salting are good ways to keep the surface from deteriorating. So, our work is looking at how we can incorporate special materials in the concrete that help it to maintain a higher surface temperature when the ambient temperature around it drops."

The Drexel team has been developing its cold-weather-resilient concrete mix over the last five years with the goal of reducing the freezing, thawing and salting that eats away at roads and other concrete surfaces. Until now, the success of their self-heating concrete – which they have previously reported can melt snow and prevent or slow ice formation for an extended period of time – has only been in a controlled lab setting.

In a paper recently published in the American Society for Civil Engineering's Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, the group took the important step of proving its viability in the natural environment.

"We have demonstrated that our self-heating concrete is capable of melting snow on its own, using only the environmental daytime thermal energy – and doing it without the help of salt, shovelling or heating systems," says Farnam.

"This self-heating concrete is suitable for mountainous and northern regions in the US, such as northeast Pennsylvania and Philadelphia, where there are suitable heating and cooling cycles in winter." 

A warm welcome

The secret to the concrete's warming is low-temperature liquid paraffin, which is a phase-change material, meaning it releases heat when it turns from its room-temperature state – as a liquid – to a solid, when temperatures drop.

In a previous paper, the group reported that incorporating liquid paraffin into the concrete triggers heating when temperatures drop. Their latest research looks at two methods for incorporating the phase-change material in concrete slabs and how each fares outside in the cold.

One method involves treating porous lightweight aggregate – the pebbles and small stone fragments that are ingredients in concrete – with the paraffin. The aggregate absorb the liquid paraffin before being mixed into the concrete. The other strategy is mixing micro-capsules of paraffin directly into the concrete.

A test in the elements

The researchers poured one slab using each method and a third without any phase-change material, as a control. All three have been outside in the elements since December 2021. In the first two years, they faced a total of 32 freeze-thaw events – instances where temperature dropped below freezing, regardless of precipitation – and five snow falls of an inch or more. 

Using cameras and thermal sensors, the researchers monitored the temperature and snow and ice-melting behaviour of the slabs. They reported that the phase-change slabs maintained a surface temperature between 42- and 55-degrees Fahrenheit for up to 10 hours, when air temperatures dipped below freezing.

This heating is enough to melt a couple of inches of snow, at a rate of about a quarter of an inch of snow per hour. And while this may not be warm enough to melt a heavy snow event before ploughs are needed, it can help de-ice the road surface and increase transportation safety, even in heavy snow events.

Staying warm enough

Simply preventing the surface from dropping below freezing also goes a long way when it comes to preventing deterioration, according to the researchers.

"Freeze-thaw cycles, periods of extreme cooling – below freezing – and warming, can cause a surface to expand and contract in size, which puts a strain on its structural integrity and can cause damaging cracking and spalling over time," says Robin Deb, a doctoral student in the College of Engineering, who helped to lead the research.

"And while this alone may not degrade the structure to the point of failure, it creates a vulnerability that will lead to the problematic interior deterioration that we need to avoid. One of the promising findings is that the slabs with phase-change materials were able to stabilise their temperature above freezing when faced with dropping ambient temperatures."

Slow and steady 

Overall, the treated lightweight aggregate slab performed better at sustaining its heating – keeping the temperature above freezing for up to 10 hours – while the slab with microencapsulated phase-change material was able to heat up more quickly, but only maintain the warming for half as long.

The researchers suggest this is due to the relative disbursal of the phase-change material within the pores of the aggregate, by comparison to the concentration of phase-change material inside the microcapsules – a phenomenon that has been studied extensively.

They also noted that the porosity of the aggregate likely contributes to the paraffin remaining a liquid below its usual freezing temperature of 42 degrees Fahrenheit.

This proved beneficial to the slab's performance because the material did not immediately release its heat energy when the temperature began to drop – holding its release until the material reached 39 degrees Fahrenheit. By contrast, the microencapsulated paraffin began releasing its warming energy as soon as its temperature reached 42 degrees, which contributed to its relatively shorter activation period.

"Our findings suggest that the phase-change material treated lightweight aggregate concrete was more suited for de-icing applications at sub-zero temperatures due to its gradual heat release within wider range of temperature," says Farnam.

Room for improvement 

While both applications were able to raise the temperature of the concrete to between 53- and 55-degrees Fahrenheit, which is more than enough to melt snow. Their performance was affected by the ambient air temperature before a snowfall and the rate of snowfall. 

"We found that PCM-incorporated pavements cannot completely melt heavy snow accumulation – larger than two inches," says Deb. "It can, however, melt snowfalls less than two inches quite effectively.

"The PCM-incorporated slabs begin melting snow as soon as it starts to accumulate. And the gradual heat release can effectively de-ice a pavement's surface, which would eliminate the need to pre-salt before the heavy snowfall."

They also noted that if the phase-change material does not have some time to 'recharge' by warming enough to return to its liquid state between freeze-thaw or snow events, then its performance may be diminished.

"Conducting this research was an important step for us to understand how concrete incorporating phase-change material behaves in nature," says Deb.

"With these findings, we will be able to continue to improve the system to one day optimise it for longer heating and greater melting. But it is encouraging to see evidence of significant reduction of freeze-thaw cycles, which demonstrates that PCM concrete is more freeze-thaw durable compared to traditional concrete."

The team plans to continue to collect data on the slabs to understand the long-term effectiveness of the phase-change materials and study how this method may extend the lifespan of concrete. 

In addition to Farnam and Deb, Nishant Shrestha, Kham Phan, Mohamed Cissao, undergraduates in the College of Engineering; and Parsa Namakiaraghi, Yousif Alqenai, Sharaniaya Visvalingam and Angela Mutua, doctoral candidates in the College of Engineering; contributed to this research. Read the full paper here: https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/JMCEE7.MTENG-17048

 

Self-heating concrete moves a step closer to ensuring snow shovels and salt will be unnecessary

Energy harvesting, an eco-friendly technology, extends beyond solar and wind power in generating electricity from unused or discarded energy in daily life, including vibrations generated by passing car engines or trains. Recent intriguing research has been announced, aiming to enhance the efficiency of energy harvesting using a new type of metasurface that can be reconfigured, resembling the assembly of LEGO bricks.

Professor Junsuk Rho from the Departments of Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, and Electrical Engineering and PhD/MS student Geon Lee from the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) have joined Professor Miso Kim from the School of Advanced Materials Science and Engineering at Sungkyunkwan University (SKKU) to collaborate on a research project. 

Together, they developed a multifunctional elastic metasurface that can be freely configured by attaching and detaching components for practical applications.

This research was published in one of the international journals in materials science, Advanced Science.

Manipulate wave energy

Metamaterials are artificially designed structures that exploit the relationships among wavelengths to manipulate wave energy such as light, vibration, and sound.

Harnessing this capability in energy harvesting allows for the gathering of elastic waves in piezoelectric components, thereby increasing the efficiency of electricity production.

However, limitations in the theoretical analysis of the beams constituting metamaterials confine their operation to a single frequency and restrict their utility to specific purposes, posing challenges for their practical application in real structures.

The research team overcame these limitations by employing the Timoshenko-Ehrenfest beam theory instead of the conventional Euler-Bernoulli beam theory.

Shear deformation

What distinguishes the former is its consideration of the fundamental characteristics of elasticity, including shear deformation and rotational inertia effects of the beam.

This study marks the first application of this theory to elastic metamaterial research. 

The researchers succeeded in interpreting and modelling elastic metamaterials for phase modulation of elastic waves using the Timoshenko-Ehrenfest beam theory.

Furthermore, they fabricated a new type of Timoshenko-Ehrenfest beam-based reconfigurable elastic metasurface (TREM) capable of attaching and detaching multiple structures.

The TREM can reconstruct its surface depending on its application, enabling control over various wave phenomena such as anomalous wave refraction, wave focusing, self-accelerated wave propagation, and total wave reflection across a wide frequency range.

Notably, the team's TREM demonstrated outstanding effectiveness in harvesting elastic wave energy, enhancing the electrical output power of piezoelectric components by up to eight times.

This highlights its value as a piezoelectric energy harvesting system. 

Professor Junsuk Rho, the lead researcher, said: "I believe that our newly developed metasurface, designed to operate across multifunctional and wide-frequency ranges, will prove invaluable in energy harvesting, most notably in the eco-friendly utilisation of ambient energy. This technology, along with its applications in structural health monitoring, wireless sensing, and the internet of things, holds great potential for significant contributions across diverse fields." 

 

Research looks to enhance efficiency of energy harvesting using reconfigurable elastic metasurface

A combined investment exceeding €7m has been announced through the US-Ireland programme – a tripartite research and development (R&D) partnership between the United States of America (USA), Republic of Ireland (RoI) and Northern Ireland (NI).  Under the programme, six awards have been announced spanning 11 institutions which will support more than 11 research positions in RoI, 10 research positions in NI, and over 20 positions in the US. The funded projects, covering three to four years, include research in the areas of sustainable collection and management of water, photonic integrated circuits, wearable sensors to monitor health, telecommunications, and microbial activity. Launched in 2006, the US-Ireland Research and Development Partnership is a unique initiative that aims to increase the level of collaborative R&D amongst researchers and industry professionals across the three jurisdictions.

Impactful research

The programme involves multiple funding partners across the three jurisdictions, working collaboratively to support excellent, impactful research. The funding agencies involved in today’s announcement are Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) in RoI; the National Science Foundation (NSF) in the USA, and the Department for the Economy (DfE) in NI. Since the US-Ireland programme started, agencies have committed €148.4m of government funding across a total of 92 awards. Professor Philip Nolan, director general of Science Foundation Ireland, said: “I am delighted to congratulate the award recipients and their collaborators on their work addressing challenges in the realms of sustainability, telecommunications, healthcare, biosensors and engineering.

"The US-Ireland R&D Partnership Programme continues to support and encourage strong, collaborative relationships between our countries. These are world-class, innovative research projects that will greatly benefit our collective societies and economies.” “With increased global competition in STEM research and talent across every field, it is more important than ever that the U.S. collaborate with countries that share our values and vision for science, engineering, and technology for a more equitable and prosperous world,” said NSF director Sethuraman Panchanathan. "The US-Ireland R&D Partnership program plays an important role in generating, at speed and scale, valuable discoveries and innovations that will lead to advancements in health, climate resilience and telecommunications to improve our world.” Mark Lee, interim director of higher education at Northern Ireland’s Department for the Economy, said: “International research partnerships have a key role to play in driving forward Northern Ireland’s economic vision for prosperity, higher productivity and a better quality of life for all of our people.

"The US-Ireland R&D Partnership, as a flagship trans-Atlantic initiative, is playing a crucial role in the delivery of this vision, supporting Northern Ireland-based researchers to make a global impact through the discovery and development of new and ground-breaking technologies that can benefit all in our society.” Prof Alan O’Riordan’s group (TNI) has received a second US-Ireland Programme award, for work using digital technologies such as AI to better understand and predict how microbes are likely to behave. Prof Michael Zaworotko (UL) has received a second US-Ireland Programme award with research that aims to use predictive modelling to make the collection of water under normal temperatures and atmospheric conditions more effective.

The 11 collaborating institutions

Tyndall National institute (TNI), University of Limerick (UL), and University College Dublin (UCD) in the Republic of Ireland; Queen’s University Belfast (QUB) and Ulster University (UU) in Northern Ireland; and North Carolina State University, Ohio State University, University of California Irvine, Virginia Tech, University of Utah, and University of Nebraska-Lincoln in the United States. For more information about the US-Ireland R&D Partnership Programme visit the programme webpage.

€7m joint investment for US-Ireland Research Programme unveiled

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