College of Engineering University of Wisconsin-Madison
Decorative header to link to Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering

Graphic of the ECE newsletter The Fountain
ECE NEWS :The Electrical & Computer Engineering Department Newsletter

 

FALL/WINTER 2006-2007
Featured articles

Candid Cameras : Setting up wireless networks for surveillance and beyond

POWER is blowing
in the wind

World-record speed
for thin-film transistors could revolutionize flexible electronics

The quick and the quantum: Knezevic applies NSF CAREER award to faster computing

Focus on new faculty:
Azadeh Davoodi

Autonomous lenses
may bring microworld
into focus



Regular Features

Message from the chair

Faculty News

Student News

Alumni News

 

 

 

spacer Homepage for ECE newsletter Button to obtain BACK ISSUES Button to CONTACT US Button to JOIN OUR MAILING LIST Button that connects to UW Foundation page for online giving  
 

FACULTY NEWS

The UW Board of Regents awarded named professorships to three Electrical and Computer Engineering faculty. These privately endowed awards are granted to faculty in recognition of achievement and support of research goals.

Lynn H. Matthias Professor in Engineering II:
Robert H. Blick—Blick oversees the Laboratory for Molecular Scale Engineering, which focuses on developing tools and methods for nanotechnology. He is particularly interested in micro- and nanoscale electro-mechanical structures, information processing in quantum and biofunctionalized circuits, and single electron, single spin circuits and devices.

Lynn H. Matthias Professor in Engineering I: Franco Cerrina—Holder of 11 patents, Cerrina also directs the UW-Madison Center for NanoTechnology (CNTech). His current research focuses on manufacturing and biological problems, especially in nano- and biotechnology, including techniques for semiconductor nanofabrication.

McFarland-Bascom Professor in Engineering:
Robert D. Nowak—Nowak has wide research interests, including statistical signal and image processing, wavelets and multiscale analysis, and machine learning, but his current focus is developing theory and protocol for wireless sensor networks. He directs the information sciences laboratory and is a faculty member of the communications and signal processing group.


With colleagues at the University of Minnesota and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Associate Professor Susan Hagness is developing a three-dimensional sensing system that leverages recent advances in electromagnetic imaging and sensing for materials, environmental, and civil infrastructure research. Under a three-year $381,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, the team will create a system enabling the tracking of localized material movement by recording displacement and rotation of passive radar targets (retroreflectors) within materials of interest.


The National Science Foundation has awarded a three-year, $300,000 grant to a team of UW-Madison researchers to develop a system to aid clinical diagnosis of botulism. Led by Assistant Professor Hongrui Jiang, Chemical and Biological Engineering John T. and Magdalen L. Sobota Professor Nicholas L. Abbott, Biomedical Engineering Professor David J. Beebe and Food Microbiology and Toxicology Professor Eric A. Johnson will interface membranes susceptible to botulism with liquid crystals and integrate them into a microfluidic sensing system to detect very low levels of botulinum neurotoxins. They also will develop a coherent interdisciplinary program integrating high quality teaching and outreach activities with research.


Thanks to technology invented by Professor Emeritus Robert Lasseter, large electricity customers across the country could soon enhance their power quality while lowering their energy cost. The Consortium for Electric Reliability Technology Solutions (CERTS) and American Electric Power, one of America’s largest electricity producers, recently signed a memorandum of understanding to work cooperatively on research, development and demonstration of Lasseter’s microgrid concept, which allows a business to switch between generating its own power and pulling power from the utility’s vast network of power lines known as “the grid.”


Assistant Professor Zhenqiang (Jack) Ma and Materials Science & Engineering Professor Max G. Lagally have been awarded a three-year $780,000 grant from Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Nano Initiative) to investigate “Multispectral Photodetector Arrays and Nanophotonics using Si/Ge Nanomembranes and Nanomembrane Stacks.” The work by Ma and Lagally will focus on the materials science and processing of Si- and Ge-based nanomembranes (SiNMs and GeNMs) and on nanomembrane photonic applications—in particular multispectral imaging arrays and photonic crystals.


A study published recently by postdoctoral researcher Hua Qin in the all-electronic New Journal of Physics, “Formation of microtubes from strained SiGe/Si heterostructures,” was in the top ten percent of articles downloaded from the Institute of Physics for the last quarter of 2005. The other authors of the study are N. Shaji, N.E. Merrill, H.S. Kim, and R.C. Toonen of the Laboratory of Molecular-scale Engineering in ECE; M.M. Roberts and Associate Scientist Don Savage of Materials Science and Engineering; Erwin W. Mueller Professor and Bascom Professor of Surface Science Max Lagally; and G. Celler of SOITEC USA.


The National Institutes of Health awarded a grant of $1.4 million for the four-year project, “Development of a multi-probe radiofrequency ablation,” a method to locally destroy cancer cells in the liver, kidney, bone and lung. Professor Dan van der Weide is working on the project as part of a team led by Radiology Professor Fred Lee Jr.

 


IN THE NEWS

A June 1 story, “Utility researching microgrid interconnections,” in
Consulting-Specifying Engineer mentioned control technology developed by Professor Emeritus Robert Lasseter. Columbus, Ohio-based American Electric Power installed the technology, which enables peer-to-peer and plug-and-play connections for microgrid components, at a research facility this summer. Scientists at AEP and the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory Consortium for Electric Reliability Technology Solutions are investigating microgrids as an approach for minimizing the effect of system-wide outages.

In a September 24 article about the security of wireless networks, the Janesville Gazette quoted Assistant Professor Seapahn Megerian. Megerian explained that encrypted sites, such as retailers or banks, are difficult to hack because the information will not make sense unless the hacker can break the encryption. “But there are a number of other ways a malicious wardriver can get access to your information or try to figure out certain things about you,” he said.

A September 29 story about the applications of nanotechnology in the Chippewa Valley Leader-Telegram cited Lynn H. Matthias Professor and Director of the UW-Madison Center for Nanotechnology Franco Cerrina. One example involved chips for testing DNA and how it is damaged by diseases like cancer. “These chips can be used to see how well your DNA is working,” Cerrina said.

 



For help with this webpage: webmaster@engr.wisc.edu.

Copyright 2007 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System

Date last modified: Monday,19-Feb-2007 15:43:00 CDT
Date created: 19-Feb-2007

spacer

 

Graphic of the ECE newsletter