To the Temple Engineering community,As we prepare to welcome the newest class of Temple students this fall, I wanted to reiterate the university's recent message about keeping our communities safe. Whether you are a current student, faculty, staff, alumni or friend of the college, please refer to the latest university guidance when coming to campus. While there is much to look forward to, as all of us seek to nurture this fragile return to a robust on-campus experience, the pandemic is still present. However, this should also ground us in the importance of engineering. The...
How one researcher's solar research seeks to support the power grid.To some, the phrase solar power is an oxymoron at worst or a big ask, at best. How can science expect to harness sunlight to become a key player in the global sustainability matrix, nudging past non-renewable energy sources such as fossil fuels? Sometimes, engineering can be aided by a sense of service with a healthy dash of audacity. Maybe that is necessary.When speaking with Dr. Xiaonan Lu and his student and postdoc researchers in his Advanced Power Electronics (APECS) group, the sense of purpose is...
Dr. Evangelia Bellas was recently awarded the prestigious NSF CAREER research award, which supports early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as an academic role model in research and education. She is the fourth College of Engineering faculty member since 2019—and the first bioengineering assistant professor—to win the NSF CAREER award. In this particular proposal, both for the research and educational portion, Dr. Bellas put the focus on fat. On the research side, Dr. Bellas proposed how blood and lymphatic vessels in fat tissue can support or hinder...
What do calculus and chocolate have in common? Ask Emma Lazar.Originally from Dillsburg, a small farm town near Harrisburg, Emma took to calculus and first majored in physics at Temple. After joining Temple Formula Racing, she shifted her focus to mechanical engineering. "I loved the stuff I was doing," she said, adding that hands-on experience is something she hopes to pursue with her career—and she is doing just that as a mechanical engineering plant intern with Hershey. "I work for the plant packaging engineer, so all my projects revolve around packaging automation,"...
It has been a busy few months for Dr. Nancy Pleshko. First, the Laura H. Carnell Professor of Bioengineering was elected Fellow by the American Institute of Medical...
Two teams of Temple engineering students landed in the final round of eight teams in the recent Engineers Without Borders global competition, Engineering for People Design Challenge. The contest challenged undergraduate teams to broaden their awareness of the social, environmental and economic implications of their engineering solutions, with finalists invited to pitch their ideas to a panel of industry experts. Both teams focused on water solutions for residents of Lobitos and Piedritas, communities in northern Peru: one Temple team looked skyward for their solution by...
Like most engineering students, Allyse Andrews wants to know how things work. Originally, she came to Temple as a Biology major before turning to Engineering Technology. Recently, the Northeast Philadelphia native was recognized by the Philadelphia chapter of Professional Women in Construction with the Student Recognition Award. "I wanted to be a medical examiner, but it wasn't for me," she said. "Once I became more acclimated to Temple, I began to make friends with people in NSBE (National Society of Black Engineers) and that influenced me." Though Allyse was connected to...
In a year where travel opportunities have largely been diminished by the pandemic, Temple's Engineers Without Borders shifted its focus to make an impact closer to home. In fall of 2020, the group finalized documentation of its most recent international trip, 3,200 or so miles away in Saccha, Peru, after completing a multi-year project to bring clean water to the village. Their next partnership brings them about just five miles from Main Campus, to South Philadelphia.Philadelphia Engineers Without Borders worked with the Temple student chapter and VietLead, a South Philadelphia...
With the College of Engineering Spring 2021 Commencement ceremony around the corner, the roster of speakers is coming together. Student speaker Michael Sydnes, an electrical and computer engineering major from Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, counts three older siblings as Temple alumni, including his sister Abby Sydnes, ENG, '17, a product manager at Comcast who was recently named to the Temple 30 Under 30's 2021 cohort.As Michael wraps up his team's senior design project—launching a high-altitude balloon that will travel 100,000-120,000 feet, measuring carbon dioxide content as...
It was the achievement that almost didn't happen.Last year, after Leo Battalora, Class of 2021, who was studying electrical engineering with a computer engineering concentration, had begun his application for the coveted Goldwater Scholarship—one of the most prestigious undergraduate STEM awards—the humble native of Germany considered dropping out of the running."Leo thought he didn't have enough research experience to make him competitive," recalled Barbara Gorka, director of Scholar Development and Fellowships Advising at Temple. A few days later, Gorka started...
On Feb. 23, Temple Prosthetics and Orthotics club (TemPO) hosted part one of their second annual Puppy Prosthetic Build. The event, which was held virtually this year and livestreamed to the general public, showcased the partnership between TemPO and high school students from Tower Hill School, an independent school in Delaware. Both groups are working virtually to build a prototype to assist pets that have limited mobility of the hind legs.Last year, the club worked on a similar project to create a prototype for an actual dog, and the event was documented on Temple's YouTube...
Dr. Mohammad F. Kiani, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, was recognized with the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching recently, as part of Temple's annual celebration of faculty achievement. The awards recognize faculty in the areas of teaching, service, creativity and research, and are the highest honors given to teachers and scholars at the university."Since coming to Temple in 2004, Dr. Kiani has been a true force at the College of Engineering, both as a talented researcher and educator who is fiercely dedicated to our students," said Keya Sadeghipour, Dean of the...
How one Temple Engineering senior design team is creating a low-cost flight simulator at Temple Ambler.The Senior Design capstone has seen student teams help to create solutions across disciplines, from improving healthcare outcomes to restoring suburban wetlands. The Light Aircraft Dynamic Flight Control Simulator (LA-DFCS) team, working primarily out of Temple University's Ambler campus, is hoping to eventually see evidence of their work by looking up toward the sky."The main objective is to develop a safe and low-cost solution to train pilots to fly small aircrafts through a...
Starting a job or internship search can feel really daunting if you don't have a strategy. I can't tell you how many times students have told me, "Leslie I have applied for dozens of jobs online and haven't heard anything." Your chance of success is a lot higher if you go into this prepared and with a game plan. In other words: trust the process. Here's some tips how you can:Have your resume reviewed One of the most common mistakes students make is coming to see me or Mike after they have submitted a poor resume to dozens of companies. Schedule an appointment on Handshake to...
Torin Johnson was the top-scoring engineer during a recent placement exam for the Philadelphia Water Department.Growing up in Upper Darby, Torin Johnson, ENG '16, remembers the "Welcome to Philadelphia" sign just down the road from his home. Now, Johnson is an Engineering Specialist for the Philadelphia Water Department, working on water main distribution design, sewer reconstruction and rehabilitation design, sustainable stormwater collection and retention design, as well as coordinating quality analysis and control for bidding projects at the construction phase.He also...
After 11 months, even with two vaccines available, a pair of pressing issues prevent a clear end to the COVID-19 pandemic: transparency and trust.Engineers and scientists rely on systems and processes as a key foundation. Systems engineering creates predictable, testable outcomes to maximize efficiency. It is often used in health care, from improving patient outcomes to customer satisfaction. To be sure, vaccines don't get into waiting arms by themselves, but by a complex, interrelated network of vaccine administration sites, providers, and an informed general public willing to...
Each year, the Temple University College of Engineering joins the larger engineering community to celebrate Engineers Week. With events powered by students, faculty and staff, the College brings engineering out of the labs and onto the rest of campus with hands-on and visual demonstrations, competitions and celebrations. This year, the College and many student professional organizations are planning a robust schedule of virtual programming and content. From detailing how engineering can help respond to COVID-19 and chart a path toward normalcy, to student-led virtual...