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February 29, 2024
Gogotsi, Distinguished University and Bach Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, will receive a one-year loan of an Agilent 5900 ICP-OES system, an optical emission spectrometer for high-throughput elemental analysis.
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February 27, 2024
Professor Jin Wen, PhD recognized for her significant contributions over her 20+ year career working at the intersection of smart buildings, sustainability, and human health and wellbeing.
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February 24, 2024
Drexel's co-op program allowed junior mechanical engineering student, Munazzah Al Hasim, to live and work abroad.
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February 21, 2024
Juggling school, work, and family life proved demanding in Blackden’s first quarter, and managing a full course load while holding down a full-time job and new fatherhood pushed him to his limits. Thankfully, Drexel’s online programs allowed him to adjust to a pace that was more suited to his schedule.
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February 20, 2024
“Drexel’s co-op program was a highlight for me when I was looking for full-time programs in the United States,” Vigneswar recalled. “Being able to take a job while I was working on my degree meant I could maintain a level of financial stability and learn while I worked.”
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February 16, 2024
Last term, Drexel professors were awarded sponsored research grants and major gifts, honors and recognition.
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February 14, 2024
Celebrating the 2024 College of Engineering Award Recipients that are being honored for their exemplary performance and significant contributions to the college.
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February 08, 2024
Drexel University has joined more than 200 of the nation’s leading artificial intelligence stakeholders to participate in a Department of Commerce initiative to support the development and deployment of trustworthy and safe AI. The effort, led by the Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology, will bring together academics, government and industry researchers, civil society organizations and AI creators and users to form the U.S. AI Safety Consortium.
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February 07, 2024
One of the most important components of satellites that enable telecommunication is the waveguide, which is a metal tube for guiding radio waves. It is also one of the heaviest payloads satellites carry into orbit. As with all space technology, reducing weight means reducing the amount of expensive and greenhouse gas-producing fuel it takes to launch a rocket, or increasing the number of devices carried by the same rocket to space. Researchers from Drexel University and the University of British Columbia are trying to lighten the load by creating and testing a waveguide made from 3D-printed polymers coated with a conductive nanomaterial called MXene.
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