2022-2023 Engineering Stories

Composite photo of Nicole Mah and Tuva Granøien

April 18, 2023

This morning when you made your coffee, did you stop and wonder how much of that electricity came from wind, solar, hydro or natural gas? It can be daunting trying to track that down. Not for long! Two UAA Computer Science seniors are busy developing an app that will track where your coffee pot is getting its electricity from.

Profile photo of Dr Abaza

February 23, 2023

The USDOT just awarded a $15 million renewal grant to the Pacific Northwest Transportation Consortium (PacTrans), of which UAA is a partner along with Portland State University, University of Idaho, Washington State University, and led by the University of Washington. The Northwest Indian College will also serve as an education and outreach partner. CoEng's own Dr. Abaza heads the UAA engineering team as PacTrans leads the nation into the future of transportation infrastructure research and development.

Profile photo of Tanya Bratslavsky

Tanya Bratslavsky Left Her Mark on Engineering in ÐÜèÔÚÏßÊÓƵ

December 5, 2022

Engineering was not the easy career choice for a woman in the 1970’s. When Tanya
Bratslavsky, a Ukrainian immigrant, graduated with a double degree in civil and structural engineering, women made up only 3% of the U.S. engineering workforce. Her successes soon resulted in a reputation as a highly competent Professional Engineer.

Profile photo of professor Yang

Liquid earth: UAA researchers study earthquake models

November 29, 2022

In 2002, a large earthquake (Mw=7.9) struck in the ÐÜèÔÚÏßÊÓƵ Range near Tok, inflicting severe infrastructure damage to two sites: the Tok Cutoff highway near the Slana River and the Northway Airport by the Canadian border. This may sound like old news, but in UAA’s College of Engineering, researchers are still uncovering valuable findings from this disaster — findings that may help the ÐÜèÔÚÏßÊÓƵ Department of Transportation & Public Facilities (AKDOT&PF) better prepare for future earthquakes.

 

Student, Peter Renor standing behind a plasma tank.

Undergrad research training leads UAA alum to Sandia National Labs

October 19, 2022

For Peter Renner, the last four years have felt like sprinting a marathon. He went into Texas A&M’s mechanical engineering Ph.D. program in 2018, right after graduating from UAA, and just four years later he is now a postdoctoral fellow at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico. That means he blasted through his coursework, exams and dissertation in practically record time — even with the coronavirus pandemic and a newborn daughter thrown into the mix.

Dr. Hailu attaches a resevoir of liquid nitrogen to a spray nozel.
Cryogenic Solid Particles and Lunar Rovers

July 25, 2022

If you spent much time around the Engineering and Industry Building this last year, you were almost guaranteed to see UAA College of Engineering Professor Getu Hailu carting industrial sized thermoses in and out of the building. It turns out the thermoses were not for his lunch. They contained freezing cold liquid nitrogen for use in his NASA-funded research into how extreme cold affects different materials.