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Friday, December 14, 2007

The passing of Frank Eck

By: Dennis K. Brown
Date: December 13, 2007
Frank E. Eck, a University of Notre Dame alumnus, benefactor and advisor, died today (Dec. 13) in Columbus, Ohio, of complications from open heart surgery. He was 84.

"Frank was a tremendously generous man – with his time, counsel and resources – and we join with his family and many friends in mourning his death,” said Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., Notre Dame’s president. “Frank’s wonderful spirit, wide smile and boundless enthusiasm will be missed.”

A 1944 graduate of Notre Dame, Eck was chairman of Advanced Drainage Systems (ADS) of Columbus. He earned his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering and had served on the College of Engineering Advisory Council since 1984.

more

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Course Reading Materials - Open Sessions

In response to recent concerns surrounding course reading materials, the University Libraries in cooperation with the Kaneb Center is offering a series of short (30 min.) presentations covering our course reading materials services and how they can support your pedagogical goals while reducing costs for your students. We will demonstrate library services (such as electronic reserves, custom created pages of library resources, and direct links to electronic journal articles), how to take advantage of these services, and then how to integrate them into your course presentation methods such as Concourse, web pages, email, etc.

Some highlights of what will be covered:

  1. Electronic Reserves - a service where the library digitizes and links to content we subscribe to based on faculty selected readings.
  2. Online Resources - custom created web pages of resources relevant to your courses, direct links to online articles, etc.
  3. Getting Your Students to the Materials - integrating our services in Concourse, email, or other methods you use for course material distribution.
  4. How to Request Customized Services from the Libraries
Dates and times are as follows:

123 Nieuwland Hall
December 12, 2007 2pm

Montgomery Auditorium, LaFortune Student Center
December 13, 2007 10am
December 17, 2007 4pm

131 Decio Hall
December 13, 2007 3pm

121 Mendoza College of Business
December 17, 2007 10am

210 Debartolo Hall
December 18, 2007 10am

Monday, December 3, 2007

Wiley InterScience Reference Works

The Engineering Library is pleased to provide The College of Engineering students and faculty with online access to a selection of major reference works from Wiley. Please visit the library's online catalog to see the full list of titles available, or click on www.interscience.wiley.com.

Wiley InterScience Major Reference Works (interscience.wiley.com/reference) are fully searchable—search the text for a phrase, article title, or keyword, browse the alphabetical and subject lists of articles, or widen your search across all content on Wiley InterScience. Articles can be viewed, downloaded, and printed in HTML or PDF format (in most cases). Where available, references link to cited articles in PubMed (Medline), ISI, CAS and in other journals through CrossRef.

Reference Works available from Wiley include titles in the following subject areas:

  • Life Sciences
  • Medicine and Healthcare
  • Mathematics and Statistics
  • Chemistry
  • Engineering
  • Psychology
  • Physics and Astronomy
  • Earth and Environmental Science
  • Polymers and Materials Science
  • Computer Science

To view a complete list of titles, visit interscience.wiley.com/reference.

For more information on the Library and accessing online reference works, please contact engrlib.1@nd.edu

Leaders on the Football Field from the College of Engineering.

2007-2008 Band Officers from the College of Engineering.

Claire Wagner HeadshotClaire Wagner

President
Level: Senior
Instrument: Falto
Major: Mechanical Engineering




Peter Brandt HeadshotPeter Brandt

Social Chair
Level: Junior
Instrument: Falto
Major: Aerospace Engineering



Kristy Schlueter HeadshotKristy Schlueter

Parliamentarian
Level: Senior
Instrument: Falto
Major: Aerospace Engineering






Drum Majors

Ryan Bailey HeadshotRyan Bailey

Drum Major
Level: Senior
Instrument: Baritone
Major: Electircal Engineering




Christine Loza HeadshotChristine Loza

Assistant Drum Major
Level: Senior
Instrument: Clarinet
Major: Chemical Engineering

Monday, November 19, 2007

Electronic reserves resolution passes

The Student Senate passed a resolution Wednesday that encourages professors to increase their use of electronic reserves in place of course packets, which spiked in price this year.

The resolution, presented by Senate Academic Affairs chair Carol Hendrickson and Fisher senator Stephen Bant, "respectfully encourages" professors to use electronic reserves instead of course packets "when it seems in the best interests of their students based on the price and convenience of the materials."

A similar resolution was presented to the Senate on Oct. 31 but failed to pass. High course packet prices have been discussed in the Senate over the past several weeks. Hendrickson and Bant conducted an e-mail survey of students last month and found that the majority of those who answered were unhappy with the higher prices of course packets.

More

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Electronic Reserves Service Survey

Engineering Faculty:

The Engineering Library would like to assess your interest in using our Electronic Reserves service (eReserves) as an alternative to traditional printed Course Packets to provide your students with journal articles or book chapters you feel are important teaching materials.

Our thinking includes the fact that course content is becoming less traditional in format and much more interdisciplinary, especially in the sciences and engineering. It may even be difficult for you to identify a textbook that covers all the important ideas that you want to impart to students via teaching materials for a course.

Students have expressed their dissatisfaction with paying Course Packet copyright fees. If you would elect to use the library's eReserves service, there is no cost to the student. The library arranges for copyright clearance and pays the copyright fees but it really is a totally different financial model. Thus we feel it is an opportune time for professors to consider using eReserves in place of Course Packets.

Briefly, eReserves is a password protected online service that allows students to access articles or book chapters any time via the internet. Access is controlled so that only currently enrolled students can use the classroom materials you have chosen so that copyright infringement does not occur. For more information about eReserves see:
http://www.library.nd.edu/reserves/ElectronicReserves.shtml

Just as an FYI, we will continue keeping Books on Reserve in the Engineering Library which students can check out for short time periods for your classes; that will not change.

At this point in time we need to estimate demand for eReserves in order to plan for costs and preparation time. If you would kindly answer the questions in this short survey, we will appreciate it very much!

Thanks so much for your participation in this survey! Please respond as soon as possible or by November 23rd.

Carol Brach

Here is the link to the survey:
http://www.zoomerang.com/survey.zgi?p=WEB227385V68HX

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Internet Detective - Wise up to the Web


A free online tutorial that will help you develop Internet research skills for your university and college work. The tutorial looks at the critical thinking required when using the Internet for research and offers practical advice on evaluating the quality of web sites.



The tutorial is divided into the following sections:

  • What's the Story?– understand the advanced Internet skills required for university and college work.
  • The Good the Bad and the Ugly– see why information quality is an issue on the web, especially for academic research. Learn how to avoid time wasting on Internet searching, scams and hoaxes.
  • Detective Work– get hints and tips that help to critically evaluate the information you find on the Internet.
  • Get On the Case – try out your Internet Detective skills with these practical exercises.
  • Keep the Right Side of the Law – be warned about plagiarism, copyright and citation.
You can work through the whole tutorial by selecting the next button at the bottom of each screen, or use the table of contents in the left margin to skip to a section.

The tutorial will take around an hour to complete, but you can do it in more than one sitting.

Friday, August 31, 2007

America's Best Engineering Colleges and Universities, as reported by U.S. News and World Report

The U.S. News and World Reports rankings of Engineering colleges and universities for the year 2008, are available to the Notre Dame community.

To access the information, a Notre Dame NetId and password are required.

Also available are the Webometrics Ranking of the World Universities - July 2007. more

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Opening Mass to launch 2007-08 academic year

By: Gail Hinchion Mancini

Date: August 22, 2007

The ceremonial opening of the 2007-08 academic year at the University of Notre Dame will take place with the opening Mass at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday (Aug. 28) in the Joyce Center arena. A procession of faculty and student representatives will precede the Mass beginning at 5:20 p.m.

The opening Mass is the one time each year when all members of the community join together to welcome new members. Notre Dame’s president, Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., will celebrate the Mass and deliver the homily.

All students, faculty and staff and their family members are invited to the Mass and a picnic dinner that will follow the liturgy.

Unique to this academic year, the Notre Dame community’s attention is turning to the beatification of the Venerable Basil Moreau, C.S.C., the founder of the Congregation of Holy Cross, whose members founded and continue to serve Notre Dame.

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Fein named director of CEST

By: William G. GilroyJeremy Fein
Date: August 20, 2007

Jeremy B. Fein, professor of civil engineering and geological sciences and director of the Environmental Molecular Science Institute at the University of Notre Dame, has been appointed director of the University’s Center for Environmental Science and Technology (CEST). He replaces Patricia A. Maurice, professor of civil engineering and geological sciences, who had served as director since 2003.

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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

N.C. State researcher appointed College of Engineering dean

Peter Kilpatrick

By: Dennis Brown

Date: August 10, 2007

Peter Kilpatrick, currently chair of chemical and biomolecular engineering at North Carolina State University, has been appointed dean of the College of Engineering at the University of Notre Dame by Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., the University’s president.

Kilpatrick succeeds Frank Incropera, who had served as dean since 1998 and remains at Notre Dame as the Brosey Professor of Mechanical Engineering. James Merz, interim dean of the college for the past year, will continue in that capacity until Kilpatrick begins in January.

more

Monday, August 6, 2007

Clean Coal Technologies: The Domino Effect at Work

Edward J. Maginn

By: William G. Gilroy
Date: August 3, 2007

Researchers at the University of Notre Dame have a proven track record in energy related research, but with the creation of the Notre Dame Energy Center in 2005, they joined the many other institutions actively pursuing clean energy technologies. What is unique about one of the most current projects is that it evolved from unrelated research ─ creating a domino effect.

more

RSC names Bohn North American associate editor

Paul Bohn

By: William G. Gilroy and
Nina Welding
Date: August 2, 2007

Paul W. Bohn, Arthur J. Schmitt Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Notre Dame, has been named the North American associate editor of The Analyst by the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC).

A journal of the RSC, The Analyst publishes original research discussing the fundamental theory, practice and application of analytical, bioanalytical and detection science. Its readers include academic and industrial researchers working in a variety of areas, including analytical chemistry, bioanalytical science, biomedical science, biotechnology, detection science, pharmacy, physics, materials science and engineering.

more

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

It's Time! Book and Electronic Reserves

Each semester you can place materials that you want to make available to
your students on reserve in the Engineering Library
These materials may include library books, your personal copies,
homework solutions, or other hand-outs. We will also attempt to
buy titles for reserve if we do not already own them.

Please let us know IMMEDIATELY about any books that we may need to
buy for your course.

Engineering can now assist with Electronic Reserves , a possible
alternative to Course Packets.

Want to give your students more of a choice? Let them decide what to
buy, print or read online?

For many materials that comprise a “course packet”
the Engineering Library staff can supply faculty with a persistent link
to that article or a scanned version. These links can be listed in the
traditional Library “eReserve” system.

Students can then click on these links and read them online or print the
materials and have the costs deducted from the University print
allocation. It’s their choice.

We are not suggesting this as necessarily a substitute for course
packets, but rather offering faculty another option in support of their
teaching.

Benefits include:

  • Copyright clearance is assured and instantaneous since materials are already part of the Engineering Library/University Libraries’ virtual collection
  • Instant access at the click of a link
  • Student chose what to print at their expense or read online
  • Save trees
  • Less weight to carry in their backpacks – how much DOES a “link” weigh?

Note: the "materials" most easily linked or scanned are journal
articles or papers that the Libraries subscribe to. The Engineering
Library can use the "eReserves" system to make a variety of other
materials available to your students as well.

Please notify any of your teaching assistants who may wish to put
material on reserve about this request also.

You may send us your reserve requests three ways:
1. Our online form for books, please specify location as Engineering Library
2. email the Engineering Library at engrlib.1@nd.edu
3. fax the list to 574-631-9208;
4. or bring your list to any staff member in the Engineering Library.

Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions you may have.

Thank you.
Tracey Morton
Engineering Library

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Dual-Degree Program in Engineering at Saint Mary's College & the University of Notre Dame

Saint Mary's College and the University of Notre Dame jointly offer a five-year, dual-degree program through which students earn a bachelor's degree (either a B.A. or B.S.) from Saint Mary's in four years, and a second bachelor of science (B.S.) in engineering degree from Notre Dame following a fifth year of study. The dual-degree program began in 1977 and was formalized and expanded in 2006 to better serve students.

click for more details

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Engineering education conference to focus on first year

By: William G. Gilroy and
Nina Welding
Date: July 25, 2007

For the second year in a row, engineering educators from across the
country will gather at the University of Notre Dame’s McKenna Hall
to discuss ways of helping new students make the transition from high school to becoming engineering undergraduates through effective first-year programs.

Titled “Dialogue II on Engineering Education: The Role of the First Year,” the workshop will run July 29 to 31 (Sunday to Tuesday). It will examine trends in first-year engineering programs, the relationship between first-year experience and success in engineering, and whether students are entering engineering programs sufficiently prepared for technically rigorous pursuits.

In addition to a number of panels, featured speakers for the event will include Gerald S. Jakubowski, president of Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology and past president of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE); David Billington, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Princeton University; and Joseph Cuseo, professor of psychology and director of the Freshman Seminar at Marymount College.

The conference sponsors include Notre Dame’s College of Engineering and Office of Research, the National Science Foundation’s Division of Education, IBM, Johnson & Johnson Corporation, and Lockheed Martin. The ASEE, as well as its Freshman Year Program division, and the Center for Innovation in Engineering Education are also sponsors.

The event’s organizers are John J. Uhran, a Notre Dame professor emeritus of computer science and engineering, and Catherine Pieronek, director of academic affairs in the College of Engineering at Notre Dame; Sharad Malik, professor of electrical engineering and director of the Center for Innovation in Engineering Education at Princeton University; Stephen Carr, professor of materials science and engineering and associate dean of undergraduate engineering at Northwestern University; and Douglas Tougaw, Frederick W. Jenny Jr. Professor of Emerging Technology and chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Valparaiso University.

Contacts: John J. Uhran, professor emeritus of computer science and engineering, 574-631-7432, juhran@nd.edu, or Catherine F. Pieronek, director of academic affairs, 574-631-4385, cpierone@nd.edu

Electrical Engineering’s Liu receives IEEE award

By: William G. Gilroy and
Nina Welding
Date: July 25, 2007

Rueywen Liu, Frank M. Freimann Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering, has been named the 2007 recipient of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering (IEEE) Circuits and Systems Society’s Mac Van Valkenburg Award. The medal honors Liu for outstanding technical contributions and continuity of leadership.

Liu’s research interests encompass circuits and systems, signal processing and communication. He currently is pursuing the development of a new multiple access system for wireless communication, which could help increase capacity and eliminate interference for wireless devices, such as cellular phones.

An IEEE life fellow, Liu also is a member of Sigma Xi, the scientific research society; Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society; and Pi Mu Epsilon, the honorary national mathematics society.

Liu, who joined the Notre Dame faculty in 1960, earned bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of Illinois. He also is the recipient of the IEEE Society Technical Achievement Award (2001), the IEEE Third Millennium Medal (2000), the IEEE Society Golden Jubilee Medal (1999), Alexander Von Humboldt Senior Research Award (1999), and IEEE Society Meritorious Service Award (1998).

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Journal of Fluid Mechanics Digital Archive

Did you know that the back volumes of JFM are checked out of the
Notre Dame Libraries more frequently than any other journal?

The Engineering Library is happy to announce the purchase of
"perpetual access" to the digital archive.

The Journal of Fluid Mechanics Digital Archive is a repository of
every single article published in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics
between 1956 and 1996.
http://journals.cambridge.org.lib-proxy.nd.edu/action/
displayMoreInfo?jid=JFM&type=bbv&bVolume=y


We provide on-line access to 1997 to date on a subscription basis.
http://journals.cambridge.org.lib-proxy.nd.edu/action/
displayJournal?jid=FLM&bVolume=y

Thursday, July 19, 2007

From the Librarian: Chemical prices for students

This broad list of chemical prices is taken from the 28 August 2006 issue of Chemical Market Reporter (now rebranded as ICIS Chemical Business Americas). The list consists of static price indications from that issue. The posted prices do not necessarily represent levels at which transactions may have actually occurred, nor do they represent bid or asked prices. Price ranges may represent quotations from different suppliers, as well as differences in quantity, quality and location. The prices are intended as a guide and not to be used as a basis for negotiations between producers and customers.

Monday, July 16, 2007

New Engineering Library Approval list is available

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy.
Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday, July 24th, 2007.

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every
two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase.
Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list
was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest
books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your
input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the
list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be
notified when the book has been received.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Graduate students - Library books are due August 1.

Graduate student books are due August 1st.

Don't wait until the last minute. If you are not done with the material you may renew them now, and they won't be due again until February 2008.

To renew items online:

  • Log in to My Account (top right of the Libraries catalog)
  • Click on "loans"
  • Select the items you want to renew and click the 'Renew' button
  • Or, click the 'Renew all' button

You may not renew items if:

  • The item has been requested by another patron
  • The item's status is 'lost'
  • Renewing the item would not result in a later due date (the due date is as far out as it can go)
  • The items are from the Reserve Book Room, Audio-Video Center, or from Interlibrary Loan
If you are done with the material, you may return the books to Hesburgh Library, or any branch of the University Libraries (Kresge not included).

If you are graduating in August, Library material must be returned before you leave campus. Failure to return University Library material(s) may result in fines, fees and withholding of transcripts.

Monday, July 9, 2007

The New Books List is now available on the Engineering Library Homepage

http://engineering.library.nd.edu/newbooks/

The New Books List includes all items added to the new book shelf during
the previous two weeks. They will also be kept on the shelf for the
following two weeks after the list is published. New books (except
reference items) may be borrowed from the library for their regular loan
period.

Monday, June 18, 2007

America's Best Engineering Colleges and Universities, as reported by U.S. News and World Report

The U.S. News and World Reports rankings of Engineering colleges and universities for the years 2000-2007, are available to the Notre Dame community. To access the information, a Notre Dame netid and password are required.

Engineering’s Brennecke receives Prausnitz Award

By: William G. Gilroy &
Nina Welding
Date: June 11, 2007

Joan F. Brennecke, Keating-Crawford Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and director of the University of Notre Dame’s Energy Center, has been awarded the 2007 John M. Prausnitz Award for outstanding achievement in applied chemical thermodynamics by the Conference on Properties and Phase Equilibria for Product and Process Design.

The award, which was presented last month in Hersonissos, Crete, at the 11th International Conference, cited her pioneering work in molecular thermodynamics of separations with ionic liquids (IL) and local composition effects on reactions in supercritical fluids (SCFs). She also presented a lecture titled “Ionic Liquids: Why Experimental Molecular Thermodynamics Matter” at the conference.

A member of the Notre Dame faculty since 1989, Brennecke’s research focuses on experimental aspects of thermodynamics and separations, with particular interest in supercritical fluids and ionic liquids. The author of numerous groundbreaking articles on the use of SCFs and ILs, her 1999 paper in the journal Nature launched a totally new area of molecular thermodynamics − one made up entirely of ions − to exploit ionic liquids. Her scientific papers in general are among the most highly cited in chemical engineering and physical chemistry.

Brennecke has received numerous awards for her research, as well as for her contributions in the classroom. Most recently, she received the Professional Progress Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE). In 2003, she was awarded the James A. Burns, C.S.C., Graduate School Award in recognition of her outstanding contributions to research and graduate education at Notre Dame. Her effectiveness in the classroom earned her a Kaneb Teaching Award in 2002 and the College of Engineering Teacher of the Year Award in 2000.

She also received the 2001 Ipatieff Prize from the American Chemical Society (ACS) in recognition of her high-pressure studies of the local structure of supercritical fluid solutions and the effect of this local structure on the rates of homogeneous reactions. In 1991, the National Science Foundation honored her with the Presidential Young Investigator Award.

Brennecke is a member of AIChE, the ACS and the American Society for Engineering Education. She currently serves on the editorial board of Green Chemistry and is chair of the Council for Chemical Research.

A graduate of the University of Texas, Brennecke received her master’s and doctoral degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1987 and 1989, respectively.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Engineering names Spira honorees

By: William G. Gilroy &
Nina Welding
Date: May 25, 2007

Thomas E. Fuja, professor and chair of the Department of Electrical Engineering, and Robert C. Nelson, professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, are the 2007 recipients of the Ruth and Joel Spira Award for Excellence in Teaching, according to James L. Merz, interim dean of the University of Notre Dame’s College of Engineering.

The award recognizes faculty in electrical engineering and aerospace and mechanical engineering for outstanding contributions to undergraduate education, classroom activities and curriculum development. It was established in 2000 by Joel Spira, the founder, chairman and director of research at Lutron Electronics, and his wife, Ruth. Known for their commitment to promoting excellence in engineering education, the Spiras have established similar awards at Carnegie Mellon University, Cornell University, Lehigh University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Pennsylvania State University, Purdue University and the University of Michigan.

Fuja, whose research encompasses digital communications, error control coding, joint source-channel coding and information theory, joined the Notre Dame faculty in 1998. Prior to that, he had served on the faculty of the University of Maryland and as program director for communications research at the National Science Foundation.

A fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, he earned bachelor’s degrees in electrical and computer engineering in 1981 from the University of Michigan. He earned a master’s degree in 1983 and a doctorate 1987, both in electrical engineering, from Cornell University.

Nelson earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in aerospace engineering from Notre Dame in 1964 and 1966, respectively, and a doctorate in aerospace engineering from Penn State in 1974. He returned to Notre Dame as a faculty member in 1975, after having served as an instructor at Penn State and as a stability and control engineer at the Air Force Flight Dynamics Laboratory.

A fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, he also served as a Fulbright Senior Scholar at the Institute for Aerodynamics and Flow Technology — a part of the German Aerospace Center in Göttingen, Germany — during the 2002-03 academic year. His research interests include aircraft stability and control, fluid mechanics and aerodynamics.

Electrical Engineering’s Huang receives Fulbright Award

By: William G. Gilroy
Date: May 22, 2007

Yih-Fang Huang, professor of engineering and concurrent professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Notre Dame, has been awarded a Fulbright-Nokia Scholarship to support his appointment as a visiting professor at the Helsinki University of Technology (HUT) for the fall 2007 semester. During his visit to Finland, Huang will carry out a program of research and deliver lectures related to wireless communication.

Huang’s award will provide support for a project titled “MIMO-OFDM for Emerging Wireless Communication Technology.” It involves a form of wireless communications called orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM), in which a single data stream is transmitted on several different radio frequencies in such a way that they do not interfere with one another. Huang’s focus will be on signal processing techniques applicable to OFDM systems with multiple antennas at the transmitter and/or receiver — multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) systems.

Helsinki is an international center of activity in wireless communications due to the technology giant Nokia’s presence there. Nokia is sponsoring Huang’s award.

During his time at HUT, Huang will collaborate with Visa Koivunen of the Signal Processing Laboratory at HUT’s SMARAD Center of Excellence in Research.

Huang, who joined the Notre Dame faculty in 1982, served as chair of the Department of Electrical Engineering from 1998 to 2006. He received his undergraduate education at National Taiwan University, earned his master’s degree from Notre Dame, and completed his doctorate at Princeton University.

Huang’s research addresses issues in statistical communication theory (the statistical theory of signal detection and estimation, especially as they apply to wireless communication). During his 25 years at the University, he has received research funding from agencies such as the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research and the U.S. Army.

The Fulbright Scholar Program is administered by the J. William Fulbright Scholarship Board, a presidentially appointed board responsible for establishing worldwide policies for the program and for the selection of Fulbright recipients. Fulbright scholarships are made possible through funds appropriated annually by the U.S. Congress and, in many cases, by contributions from partner countries and/or by private sector firms, such as Nokia. Each year, the program sends about 800 faculty and professionals to 140 countries to lecture, do research and participate in seminars.

Friday, May 18, 2007

Notre Dame elects Purdue mechanical engineer as vice president for research

By: Dennis Brown &
Gail Hinchion Mancini

May 17, 2007

Robert J. Bernhard, associate vice president for research and professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University, has been elected by the University of Notre Dame Board of Trustees to the newly created position of vice president for research, effective Aug. 1. He also was appointed a full professor in the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering.

“Bob Bernhard is a gifted researcher and teacher, a skilled administrator and leader, and a successful facilitator of large-scale research programs and investments,” said Thomas G. Burish, Notre Dame’s provost. “He has the background, commitment, talent, integrity and work ethic to help propel Notre Dame’s research efforts forward. He was the unanimous choice of the faculty search committee. We are grateful that he will be joining us and excited about his leadership of our overall research efforts.”

Burish also thanked the seven faculty members of the University’s national search committee for their efforts in attracting Bernhard to Notre Dame.

“The members of the search committee worked tirelessly to identify, evaluate and recruit a strong slate of candidates for the position,” he said. “With Professor Bernhard in particular, who was sought out by the committee and did not apply for the position, the committee members were articulate and energetic in describing Notre Dame’s research vision and opportunities, and in defining its distinctive mission. They deserve much of the credit for this most successful search.”

Bernhard said the “bold vision” of Burish and Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., the University’s president, to take Notre Dame to the next level as an institution fully committed to research, undergraduate teaching and its Catholic character is “personally exciting to me. The challenge of leading the research component of that vision is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that fits my background and experience very well. I’m honored to be given this opportunity.”

He added: “I’ve been at Purdue for 25 years and had a wonderful career here. It’s very difficult to leave, particularly with all of the exciting new initiatives that have begun here in recent years.”

Bernhard is one of the nation’s leading experts on noise control, with a focus on tire and traffic noise, numerical noise control design methods, noise source identification, active noise and vibration control, and machinery noise control applications. He has directed the research of 49 engineering graduates and is the co-author of more than 170 journal and conference publications on various aspects of noise control engineering, numerical methods, vibrations and design.

Bernhard is a frequent consultant to industry and government and has had his research activities funded by more than a dozen corporations as well as by NASA, the U.S. Department of Transportation, the Indiana Department of Transportation, the Federal Aviation Administration, the Federal Highway Administration and the National Science Foundation.

A graduate of Iowa State University, Bernhard worked from 1973 to 1977 as an engineer with Westinghouse Electric Co. in Baltimore. At the same time, he worked on and earned his master’s degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Maryland. He returned to Iowa State in 1977 to pursue his doctorate and to serve on the engineering faculty as an assistant professor of freshman engineering.

After completing his doctoral studies, Bernhard joined the faculty of the School of Mechanical Engineering at Purdue in 1982. He has been affiliated with the Acoustics and Noise Control Research Program of the Ray W. Herrick Laboratories at Purdue, and served as its director from 1994 to 2004. He has been the director of the Institute for Safe, Quiet and Durable Highways since 1998 and for the last three years has served as Purdue’s associate vice president for research.

Bernhard holds two patents and is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. He has been the secretary general of the International Institute of Noise Control Engineering since 2000, is a fellow of the Acoustical Society of America and was named a distinguished noise control engineer by the Institute of Noise Control Engineering in 2003.

Bernhard and his wife, Debbi, are the parents of four children ages 25 to 16. Among his civic activities, Bernhard served on the St. Thomas Aquinas Parish Pastoral Council in West Layfayette, Ind., for four years and was president in 2006. He was a Little League baseball coach for 13 years.

Bernhard’s position is newly created and a result of the administrative restructuring of graduate education and research at Notre Dame. The new structure splits the former position of vice president for graduate studies and research into two positions that will each report directly to the provost. The reorganization was recommended by the Academic Council and the president and approved by the Board of Trustees.

Bernhard will address infrastructure and support of research — the work of faculty, graduate and undergraduate students alike — and the competition for funding dollars, as well as support for the University’s technology transfer efforts.

A new and unnamed position in the provost’s office will have oversight of graduate studies.

The search committee for the vice president for research position was composed of seven faculty members and one graduate student: Neil Delaney, philosophy and honors program; Stephen Batill, aerospace and mechanical engineering; Richard Taylor, chemistry and biochemistry; Malgorzata Dobrowolska-Furdyna, physics; Scott Monroe, psychology; Gary Bernstein, electrical engineering; Frank Collins, biological sciences; and Amber Handy, a graduate student in the Department of History.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Reading Days and Final Exam Week Schedule

May 4 - May 11th

Thursday, May 3th.......8 am - 11 pm
Friday, May 4th..........8 am - 8 pm
Saturday, May 5th.......1 pm - 8 pm
Sunday, May 6th.........1 pm - 11 pm
Monday, May 7th -
Thursday, May 10th....8 am - 11 pm
Friday, May 11th..........8 am - 5 pm

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Spring has sprung. Graduation is not far behind.

Before you leave, please return your library books.

As you Spring clean your offices and labs,
please return any unclaimed library materials.

Materials may be returned to Hesburgh Library,
or any branch of the University Libraries at Notre Dame.

Failure to return University Library materials before leaving
campus
may result in fines, fees, and withholding of transcripts.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Ordering Fall textbooks? The Engineering Library has course planning services.

We facilitate student access to high-demand items in book form or electronic formats.

Solve these problems using Reserve services at the Engineering Library.

Eighty books were ordered, but only sixty have been received. What can you do until the bookstore receives the other twenty? Put a copy on reserve in the Engineering Library.

There is a book with only one chapter appropriate for your class, but the cost of the book is $250.00. Do you ask your students to buy the book, or do you consider their finances and ignore this resource? A scanned copy of the chapter can be made electronically available.

You announce in class the title of a book for additional reading. An eager student checks out the only library copy, while twenty other students vent their frustration. Inform Library staff first and the copy is placed on reserve with a two (2) hour circulation limit.

You wish to use an article from a journal and the library has only one copy for multiple students. A scanned copy of the article is made available online, with copyright protections.

You may send us your reserve requests three ways:

1. Send email to engrlib.1@nd.edu

2. Use the on-line form (be sure to select "Engineering Library" from
the selection of libraries):
https://www.library.nd.edu/reserves/forms/books.shtml

3. Bring your printed list to any staff member in the Engineering Library.

The sooner we are made aware your needs, the sooner we can collect or purchase the material necessary for your course. The beginning of the semester is the peak work period in the area of reserves. Try as we might our limited staff cannot process everything at once.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

New Books List for March 19, 2007 is now available on the Engineering Library homepage

ABOUT NEW BOOKS

The New Books List includes all items added to the new book shelf during the previous two weeks. They will also be kept on the shelf for the following two weeks after the list is published. New books (except reference items) may be borrowed from the library for their regular loan period.

Monday, March 26, 2007

A new Engineering Library Approval list is available on our library home page

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy.
Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday,April 3rd, 2007.

https://www.library.nd.edu/approval/engineering/

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every
two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase.
Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list
was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest
books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your
input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the
list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be
notified when the book has been received.

Monday, March 12, 2007

A new Engineering Library Approval list is available on our library home page

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy.
Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday, March 20th, 2007.

https://www.library.nd.edu/approval/engineering/

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every
two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase.
Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list
was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest
books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your
input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the
list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be
notified when the book has been received.

New Books List for March 5, 2007 is now available on the Engineering Library Homepage

http://engineering.library.nd.edu/newbooks/

INFORMATION ABOUT NEW BOOKS

The New Books List includes all items added to the new book shelf during
the previous two weeks. They will also be kept on the shelf for the
following two weeks after the list is published. New books (except
reference items) may be borrowed from the library for their regular loan
period.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Library Workshop: Who's Citing Whom?

Please join us at the library for our Spring, 2007 Library Workshop.

Learn how to:

  • Find the number of times a book or article has been cited using Web of Science and other citation indexes;
  • Discover who is citing your publications;
  • Locate impact factors for journals using Journal Citation Reports.
Where?: Hesburgh Library, Room 222

When?: Wednesday, March 21, 1:30-3:00 PM
OR Wednesday, March 28, 10:00-11:30 AM

Who?: Faculty and Graduate students interested in knowing the impact of their (or anyone's) publications.

How?:
Register at
https://www.library.nd.edu/instruction/forms/workshop/index.cgi
by March 15, 2007.

Refreshments will be provided.

Sponsored by Library Instructional Services.

Contact Cheri Smith at csmith@nd.edu or 631-4271 for additional information.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

New Books List for February 19, 2007 is now available on the Engineering Library Homepage

http://engineering.library.nd.edu/newbooks/


INFORMATION ABOUT NEW BOOKS

The New Books List includes all items added to the new book shelf during
the previous two weeks. They will also be kept on the shelf for the
following two weeks after the list is published. New books (except
reference items) may be borrowed from the library for their regular loan
period.

Monday, February 26, 2007

Electronic Course Reserves

Electronic Reserves, or E-Reserves, is a password protected on-line system that allows students enrolled in a course to access their instructor's course readings from any computer with an Internet connection.

Do you have a single chapter of a book or a journal article you want your students to read? Bring the material to the Engineering Library and we will get it on-line for you within 24 hours in compliance with copyright law. (Saturdays & Sundays excluded)

You may also submit your request(s) to the Hesburgh Reserve Book room, at the Hesburgh Library. All the faculty and TA’s from the other schools do. Please bring an original or copy of the material you wish to put on E-Reserve to us with as much lead time as possible.

For full information of E-Reserve material guidelines and copyright visit:
http://www.library.nd.edu/reserves/EReserve_Guidelines.shtml

A new Engineering Library Approval list is available on our library home page

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy.
Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday, March 6th, 2007.

https://www.library.nd.edu/approval/engineering/

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every
two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase.
Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list
was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest
books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your
input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the
list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be
notified when the book has been received.

Friday, February 16, 2007

News about the Journal of Fluid Mechanics Digital Archive

Did you know that the back volumes of JFM are checked out of the Notre Dame Libraries more frequently than any other journal?

The Engineering Library is happy to announce the purchase of "perpetual access" to the digital archive.

The Journal of Fluid Mechanics Digital Archive is a repository of every single article published in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics between 1956 and 1996.
http://journals.cambridge.org.lib-proxy.nd.edu/action/displayMoreInfo?jid=JFM&type=bbv&bVolume=y

We provide on-line access to 1997 to date on a subscription basis.
http://journals.cambridge.org.lib-proxy.nd.edu/action/displayJournal?jid=FLM&bVolume=y

The New Books List for February 5, 2007

INFORMATION ABOUT NEW BOOKS

The New Books List includes all items added to the new book shelf during the previous two weeks. They will also be kept on the shelf for the following two weeks after the list is published. New books (except reference items) may be borrowed from the library for their regular loan period.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Construction on new engineering building to begin in November on Notre Dame Avenue

By: Dennis Brown
Date: February 6, 2007

At its winter meeting on campus Feb. 2, the Board of Trustees of the University of Notre Dame approved the construction of a $69.4 million building for the College of Engineering.

new College of Engineering building

To be located on the current site of the University Club on Notre Dame Avenue, the 142,000-square-foot facility will house a nano technology research center, the University’s new Energy Center, an 11,800-square-foot semiconductor processing and device fabrication clean room, and an undergraduate interdisciplinary learning center.

The new building will be called Stinson-Remick Hall in honor of principal benefactors Kenneth and Ann Stinson and Jack and Mary Ann Remick. Stinson is a 1964 Notre Dame graduate and a member of the Board of Trustees. Jack Remick, a 1959 graduate, is a member of the University’s advisory council for the College of Engineering, and a recent gift from Mary Ann Remick created an endowment for visiting fellows in Notre Dame’s Center for Ethics and Culture.

The learning center will be named in honor of major benefactors Ted and Tracy McCourtney. A 1960 Notre Dame graduate, Ted McCourtney is a member of the Board of Trustees.

The new building, which is similar in size to the nearby DeBartolo Center for the Performing Arts, has been fully funded by the three major benefactors and 45 additional donors. Construction is expected to begin in November and completed by late 2009 or early 2010.

“This wonderful new facility will address multiple needs in our College of Engineering – providing much needed space for our emerging research in nano technology and energy, and enhancing the interdisciplinary experiences of our undergraduates,” said Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., president of Notre Dame. “We are grateful to the Stinsons, Remicks and McCourtneys for their extraordinary generosity, as well as to all of the other benefactors who have made this project a reality.”

Researchers in Notre Dame’s Center for Nano Science and Technology explore new device concepts and associated architectures that are enabled by novel phenomena on the nanometer scale. Established in 1999, the center is under the direction of Wolfgang Porod, Frank M. Freimann Professor of Electrical Engineering.

The Notre Dame Energy Center was created in 2005 under the direction of Joan Brennecke, Keating-Crawford Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. Faculty members associated with the center are united in developing new energy technology to meet a compelling national and international challenge.

The interdisciplinary learning center will be nearly four times the size of the current center established in Cushing Hall. The center provides undergraduate students with a blend of computer work stations, library resources and laboratory space.

The semiconductor processing and device fabrication clean room will be the first such facility at Notre Dame.

The University Club was founded in 1958 and offers food and beverage service to members. University officials informed the club’s board in 2004 of the need to vacate the current site to prepare room for a new engineering facility.

“The University Club is an important part of campus life at Notre Dame,” said John Affleck-Graves, executive vice president. “The administration of the University has been in discussions with the club’s board to seek another location, and we will continue to work on a solution."

Among the options proposed by University officials is relocating the club in what currently is Greenfield’s International Café in the Hesburgh Center on Notre Dame Avenue.

New Engineering Library Approval list is available

A new Engineering Library Approval list is available on our library home page:

https://www.library.nd.edu/approval/engineering/

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy. Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday, February 20th, 2007.

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase. Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be notified when the book has been received.

Friday, February 9, 2007

Online Engineering Encyclopedias

The Engineering Library is seeking new ways to get good quality reference materials into the hands of faculty and students. We feel it is important to offer scholarly and reliable alternatives to web sources such as "Wikipedia" via the campus network.

Thus we have purchased on-line access to a number of encyclopedias and want to draw your attention to them: (you can link them separately)

  • Encyclopedia of Biomedical Engineering,
  • Encyclopedia of Cell Technology,
  • Encyclopedia of Energy,
  • Encyclopedia of Environmental Microbiology,
  • Encyclopedia of Hydrological Sciences,
  • Encyclopedia of Medical Devices and Instrumentation, and
  • Encyclopedia of Smart Materials.

We have added a link from the Engineering Library web page to the encyclopedias:
http://www.library.nd.edu/ddw/public/resource_list.cgi?term_id_1=17589&term_id_2=18984&list_type=combo_term

We hope you will use them and let your students know about them; incorporate them into class assignments, etc. If you would like us to find others that cover subjects we do not have, please let us know.

Your feedback is always welcome!

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

1,500 books damaged in flood at Hesburgh Library

By: Don Wycliff & Dennis Brown
Date: February 5, 2007

About 1,500 books were damaged and some 8,500 books were removed from shelves Monday (Feb. 5) when a frozen pipe ruptured and sent water cascading through parts of the third, second and first floors and the basement of the Hesburgh Library at the University of Notre Dame.

The library was closed at approximately 9 a.m., when water from the third-floor pipe was discovered on the second floor. None of the books are thought be seriously damaged, and the most of the library reopened at 3:30 p.m.

Library officials believe that an air handler on the third floor failed to bring hot air to the water pipe, causing it to freeze and burst when temperatures in the region dropped below zero.

After the flooding was discovered, library staff members draped heavy plastic sheeting over the shelves, keeping water off of most of the books. The flooding damaged parts of the economics and music collections on the second floor and reached the rare books and special collections areas in the basement, but caused minimal damage to those collections. Wet books were opened and placed next to table and floor fans. The cost estimate of the damaged is not yet available.

As a result of similar incident three years ago, officials said, the library stocked up on supplies of sheeting and other equipment needed in the event of a flood.

Employees from the library, fire department, security police department, facilities maintenance, and risk management and safety assisted with clean-up efforts.

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

New Engineering Library Approval list is available

A new Engineering Library Approval list is available on our library home page:

https://www.library.nd.edu/approval/engineering/

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy. Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday, February 6th, 2007.

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase. Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list
was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be notified when the book has been received.

New Books List for January 22, 2007 is now available.

The New Books List for January 22, 2007 is now available on the Engineering Library Homepage, at:

http://engineering.library.nd.edu/newbooks/


INFORMATION ABOUT NEW BOOKS

The New Books List includes all items added to the new book shelf during the previous two weeks. They will also be kept on the shelf for the following two weeks after the list is published. New books (except reference items) may be borrowed from the library for their regular loan period.

Monday, January 22, 2007

Materials Database (biomaterials and bioengineering)

Engineering faculty and grad students working in materials and more
specifically, biomaterials:

I am trying to get some sense of the usefulness of one of our subscribed databases, Cambridge Scientific Abstracts' Materials Science Database (group) for getting articles and information on bio-type materials and associated topics related to them.

I need your help because I am not familiar enough with the names of the materials you may be interested in to check on them. If you can take a minute to do a few searches and let me know if you do use or will use this materials database suite in the future I will appreciate it very much.

I know it's important to have a good mix of resources and for materials we have Compendex and INSPEC (which are now on the same platform and can be searched together) and Web of Science, along with Biological Abstracts, Medline and PubMed for the biomaterials/bioengineering type of literature.

Click on the link:
http://www-md3.csa.com/ids70/advanced_search.php?SID=186c10626c6251d86afd3e4fb683328b
to go to the database which lists the individual titles included in the group. The default is set to search all simultaneously, but individual selections can be made as well.

I will appreciate hearing from you if you have research interests in materials and/or biomaterials or bioengineering.

I will also appreciate feedback from researchers in nanomaterials and other advanced materials, and any of you who work in environmental science who seek info on "materials".

Best regards,

Carol
brach.10@nd.edu

Thursday, January 18, 2007

New Books List for January 8, 2007

The New Books List for January 8, 2007 is now available on the Engineering Library Homepage, at:

http://engineering.library.nd.edu/newbooks/


INFORMATION ABOUT NEW BOOKS

The New Books List includes all items added to the new book shelf during the previous two weeks. They will also be kept on the shelf for the following two weeks after the list is published. New books (except reference items) may be borrowed from the library for their regular loan period.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Access: News from the University Libraries of Notre Dame

Access: News from the University of Notre Dame, Fall 2006, is now available online.

Monday, January 15, 2007

New Engineering Library Approval list

A new Engineering Library Approval list is available on our library home page:

https://www.library.nd.edu/approval/engineering/

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy. Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday, January 23rd, 2007.

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase. Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be notified when the book has been received.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

RefWorks Demonstration

Dear Students:

On Thursday, January 25 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., in the concourse
of the
Hesburgh Library, there will be a demonstration of a new software
program,
RefWorks, that is better and easier to use for creating footnotes
and endnotes and generating bibliographies.

For more
information, visit http://www.library.nd.edu/refworks/.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

RefWorks

A new service provided by the University Libraries and OIT, Refworks is a web-based tool that allows you to store, organize and format citations from your articles, books and other references. Citations can be saved directly from many different databases including PsycINFO, Web of Science, the library catalog, and more. RefWorks can be used with Microsoft Word to automatically format your bibliographies and in-text citations in APA, MLA and many other styles.

RefWorks is similar to Endnote, but web-based, so you can get to it anytime you have access to the Internet. It also offers a very user-friendly interface.

To register and find additional help, go to http://www.library.nd.edu/refworks/

If you are teaching a class that will require library research, consider asking for an in-class brief demo of Refworks to help your students get started with this citation service. Contact training@nd.edu or 1-7227 to make class arrangements.

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

New Engineering Library Approval list is available

A new Engineering Library Approval list is available on our library home page:

https://www.library.nd.edu/approval/engineering/

We welcome your input on books you would like the library to buy. Please submit your recommendations by Tuesday, January 9th, 2007.

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE APPROVAL LIST:

Approval books are put on display in Room 120 of Hesburgh Library every two weeks. The librarians review the books and select items to purchase. Books that are not selected are returned to the distributors. This list
was created to make it easy for Engineering Library patrons to suggest books.

Although the librarians review all of the books that are available, your input is welcome. If you would like the library to buy an item on the list, simply check it and submit the form. You can also choose to be notified when the book has been received.