Materials Science and Engineering MSE Home Clark School Home  
MSE Home Clark School Home UMD Home
 
search

UMD    MSE


Share |



Jane Cornett with her winning poster.

Jane Cornett with her winning poster.

 

Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) graduate student Jane Cornett, advised by Assistant Professor Oded Rabin, took first prize at the 2010 ReserchFest. Cornett's winning poster and oral presentation, "Thermoelectric Figure of Merit Calculations for Nanowires–Moderate Confinement Regime," described her use of Matlab scripts to model the thermoelectric properties of semiconducting (Si, InSb) nanowires. Cornett conducts her research in Rabin's Materials and Interface NanoTechnology Laboratory.

Second prize was awarded to graduate student Pushkar Pendse, advised by Assistant Professor Jeffery Klauda (Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering [ChBE]) for his work, "Probing Sugar Transport through Lactose Permease of E. coli using Molecular Simulations"; and graduate student Laleh Emdadi, advised by Professor Kyu Yong Choi (ChBE), won third prize for "Dispersion Polymerization at Low Temperature: A Route to Encapsulate Biologically-Active Materials."

ResearchFest is an annual event that highlights the best undergraduate and graduate-level research from the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, and the Fischell Department of Bioengineering (BioE). It allows students to share their work in a fun, casual setting with faculty, staff and students from their own and other departments. The event is sponsored by all three departments, and features guest judges, prizes, and a reception.

ResearchFest 2010 was organized by graduate students Neville Fernandes (BioE), Shilpa Nargund (ChBE), and Richard Suchoski (MSE). This year's judges were Dr. Ivan Lee (Army Research Laboratory) and Dr. F. Joseph Schork (Professor and Chair, ChBE).

Participants are judged on the quality of their oral presentations, quality and clarity of their hypothesis, originality, methods and analysis, presentation of data, supporting material and conclusions, and the significance or potential impact of their work.

For more information and photos from the event, visit the ResearchFest homepage »

Related Articles:
Smaller Is Not Always Better: A New Model for Thermoelectric Materials
Cornett wins MRS Student Presentation Award
Cornett, Karki Selected for Sustainable Energy Workshop in Ethiopia
ResearchFest 2012
Cornett Named ARCS Scholar
ResearchFest 2009 Winners Announced

February 22, 2010


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Clark School Celebrates Students, Honors Alumni and Faculty at Spring 2013 Commencement

36 Clark School Students Accepted into NIST Summer Research Program

Second ARCS Fellowship for Gore

Taillon Wins NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

Clark School Freshmen Compete in Hovercraft Competition

2013 Dean's Student Research Awards Announced

Clark School Professor's Research Featured by Department of Energy

Christou Invited to Discuss Wide Bandgap Semiconductors, Physics-of-Failure

Atoms-Thick Coating Ready for First Test on Silver Artifact

Dean Pines' Op-Ed in Baltimore Sun Stresses Need for Prizes, Competitions to Spur Innovation

 
Share |

 

 
Back to top