Three School of Engineering faculty members, including two from the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), are among the 156 researchers from around the United States who were selected for the 2017 National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) program.
Ruonan Han, the E. E. Landsman (1958) Career Development Assistant Professor in EECS, will explore on-chip terahertz electronic frequency combs.
Luqiao Liu, the Robert Shillman Career Development Assistant Professor in EECS, will explore spin-orbit interaction based spintronics with superconductors.
They were joined by Amos Winter, assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, who will explore tuning passive prosthetic leg dynamics to create low-cost, robust devices that can replicate physiological gait in multiple activities of daily living.
"Resilient infrastructure, abundant food and water, affordable medical treatments, smart communities—these are engineering marvels that we all want to experience," said Barry Johnson, acting National Science Foundation assistant director for engineering. "For each one of us, throughout our great nation, to reach the America of our dreams requires investment today in new generations of engineering researchers across the country."
Supported by grants from the National Science Foundation's Engineering Directorate, each researcher will set out with at least a $500,000 award and a plan to make advances in engineering. This year's awardees hail from 88 institutions across 34 U.S. states.
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