Michigan Technological University
 Research in Mechanical Engineering -- Engineering Mechanics
 


Department of
Mechanical Engineering -- Engineering Mechanics
Michigan Technological University
1400 Townsend Drive
Houghton, MI USA 49931-1295
Phone: 906.487.2551 Fax: 906.487.2822

 

 

 
           
 
 
Research Thrusts
 
Engineering Education Innovation
As the world continues to change with globalization and technological advances so must engineering education p...
Advanced Power System
In the face of an impending energy crisis, the Advanced Power Systems research center is exploring alternative...
Space Systems
The Space Systems Research group is creating innovative electric propulsion systems to make space travel more ...
Mechanics of Multi-scale Materials
The Mechanics of Multi-scale Materials research group uncovers the relationships of structures across the full...
Multi-scale Sensors and Systems
The Multi-scale Sensors and Systems Research Group specializes in the design, fabrication, integration, and te...
Sustainable Manufacturing and Design
Many of the campus research efforts on sustainability are coordinated by the Sustainable Futures Institute (SF...
 
 
   
Research News
 
Odegard Earns NASA Grant
 
researcher at Michigan Technological University has received a $255,000 grant from NASA. His work in developing computer models for tiny materials could result in stronger, lighter aircraft.

Greg Odegard, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, creates these models to predict the strength of nanomaterials. One nanometer is equal to one-billionth of a meter.

"The materials we use, called nanotubes, are so small that we must rely on computer models to determine their stiffness and strength," Odegard said. "It is very expensive to do this through experimentation."

Scientists typically add these small nano-particles to other materials to take advantage of a specific property; for example, strength or resistance to corrosion.

Odegard focuses on polymers--or plastics--that are extremely lightweight, yet can be combined with other materials to add strength.

"These nanotubes are carbon and they are extremely strong," he said. "They are stronger and stiffer than diamonds."

Potential benefits of this research include improved structural components of aircraft, such as the outer skin and support structure of wings and the outer surface of the fuselage.

He also is looking at ways to develop advanced materials that can measure and report aircraft damage to the pilot and materials that neutralize the threat of projectile impacts.

Odegard started his computer modeling work four years ago as a scientist at NASA's Langley Research Center in Virginia. He joined the Michigan Tech faculty this past August.

Michigan Tech's mechanical engineering department is among the largest in the nation, with an undergraduate program ranked in the top 25 in the country by US News

 
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