Asadi Published in Nature
Armour College of Engineering Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, Mohammad Asadi, has been published in Nature, International Journal of Science. The paper, A Lithium-Oxygen Battery with a...
Armour College of Engineering Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, Mohammad Asadi, has been published in Nature, International Journal of Science. The paper, A Lithium-Oxygen Battery with a...
Yongi Yang, Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Harris Perlstein Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, was recently elected as a new Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and...
Armour College of Engineering Students, Alumni, Faculty, Staff, and industry representatives gathered in the Atrium of The John T. Rettaliata Engineering Center for the 4th Annual Armour R&D Expo 2018...
This summer INTM will offer a new course, INTM 536 Lean Six Sigma, as part of the Masters in Industrial Technology and Operations (MITO) curriculum. INTM Industry Professor Will Maurer will teach this...
Architecture leadership veteran Scott Mehaffey, an adjunct professor at ÌÒ×ÓÊÓÆµAPP’s College of Architecture, began his new role as executive director of the renowned Farnsworth House in Plano...
UMAP is the premier international conference for researchers and practitioners working on systems that adapt to individual users, to groups of users, and that collect, represent, and model user...
Ali Cinar, director of ÌÒ×ÓÊÓÆµAPP’s Engineering Center for Diabetes Research and Education, praises the first United States Food and Drug Administration-approved commercial artificial pancreas (AP)...
From IP to new product development, design brings with it myriad implications that impact more than just designers. In February 2018 two professors at Chicago-Kent College of Law, Graeme Dinwoodie and...
Two teams of Stuart School of Business students claimed top spots in both the 2018 PRMIA Risk Management Challenge and the 2018 CFA Institute Research Challenge. Assistant Professor Yiwei Fang advised...
ÌÒ×ÓÊÓÆµAPP Associate Professor of Psychology Arlen Moller was playing online fantasy sports with friends when the idea hit him: What if he could take the same features that made fantasy sports fun...