Automation Alley: Kristen Cetin describes how MSU’s Industrial Training and Assessment Center helps improve performance and build an energy-savvy workforce
MSU’s Industrial Training and Assessment Center (ITAC), a U.S. Department of Energy-funded center located on MSU’s East Lansing campus, offers no-cost energy and productivity assessments to help Michigan’s small manufacturers and commercial building owners save energy, reduce waste, and build a skilled energy workforce.
Academia and Industry: Collaborating for the win
The College of Engineering at Michigan State University is a top producer of practice-ready talent for Michigan and beyond due in large part to a deeply rooted commitment to collaborating with industry and government.
How undergraduate research fueled my success
Nathan Denning is a civil engineering student and research assistant in the College of Engineering. Growing up in a military family, I was fortunate to live in and experience multiple places across the country, ranging from the suburbs of large cities to the island of Kodiak, Alaska, a community entirely powered by renewable energy.
Powering Michigan’s Economy and Future
For Peter Savolainen, Michigan’s roadways demand earnest, ongoing attention. The chair of Michigan State University’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and an MSU Research Foundation Professor, Savolainen has been a prominent figure in the state’s efforts to reduce traffic-related crashes, injuries and fatalities.
MSU engineers create bendable, self-heating and healing concrete
Concrete is the second largest consumed material in the U.S., and its production is responsible for 8% to 10% of carbon dioxide emissions. Civil engineers at Michigan State University have developed flexible concrete that is self-healing and produces heat, which could prove to be an environmentally friendly option for roads in terms of snow and ice removal.
Yadu Pokhrel and Phanikumar Mantha are helping model water policies
In grade school, you may have learned about the water cycle. Water falls from the sky as varied forms of precipitation, exists on the Earth as groundwater or surface water, evaporates or transpires into the atmosphere as gas, and condenses back into a liquid (or solid) state.
For the Green and White
Michigan State University Dean Leo C. Kempel’s last day as dean in the College of Engineering will be Sept. 30, 2024, after more than a decade.
Automation Alley: The Future of Lightweight Vehicles
MSU and the U.S. Army Ground Vehicles System Center (GVSC) are advancing their 30-year collaboration on advanced vehicle technologies through a new mobility research initiative to develop lightweight, autonomous vehicles and prepare the next generation of STEM leaders.