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Jacque wins NSF award for new nano-computed tomography system for NC State.gra

August 7, 2018

Great news! We were recently awarded a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to buy a high-resolution computer tomography system, to be located at the Advanced Instrumentation Facility on Centennial Campus. You can see the award announcement on the NSF website or the AIF’s announcement (along with an interview with Dr. Cole!), here.

More info from the NSF announcement:

This award will enable the purchase of a high-resolution computed tomography (CT) system at North Carolina State University (NC State). This type of system works much like medical scanners used to obtain 3D images of the inside of the body, but it can provide details at a much smaller scale – down to less than 1 micrometer. This system will allow scientists and engineers to study the intricate structures of very small internal features within many materials, including dinosaur bone, cutting-edge plastics, new materials for energy storage, and specialized metals for artificial joints. A better understanding of internal structure will advance technologies in material design and fabrication and will aid the development of innovative approaches for medicine and engineering. The new high-resolution CT system will enhance college education by integrating student training into more than a dozen existing graduate and undergraduate courses. Researchers will use images and results from the instrument in ongoing outreach activities that will enhance both K-12 education and community engagement.

The acquisition of a high-resolution nano-CT system will fill a critical gap in current CT and microscopy equipment in the region. This technology will add nondestructive nanoscale imaging that requires minimal sample preparation and accommodates a relatively large field of view for large samples, low- and high-density materials simultaneously, and in situ environmental conditions. It will advance fundamental understanding about internal nano- and microscale structures and complex interfaces within a broad range of materials (e.g., dinosaur bone, biopolymers, multilayer capacitors, additive manufactured metal parts, and fibrous materials). These unique capabilities are essential for five strategic research areas at NC State and in the surrounding region: biomedical sciences, biological and social sciences, materials science and characterization, materials synthesis and fabrication, and textiles and fibrous materials. Locating the instrument within NC State’s Analytical Instrumentation Facility, a leading open-access materials characterization facility, will make it broadly available to regional and national users, catalyzing interdisciplinary collaborations to advance the scope and impact of many research areas in science and engineering.

This award reflects NSF’s statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation’s intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.


Maggie and Carly Present their research at the Summer OUR Symposium

July 31, 2018

Maggie and Carly recently presented their research at the Summer Undergraduate Research Symposium at NC State.

Great job to both of you!

Maggie’s poster focused on her recent work with BPBI in rats: “Brachial Plexus Birth Injury Alters Muscle Composition”.

Carly presented on her work with Jon, “The Effects of Aging on Cellular Proliferation and Protein Signaling in a Bone-Muscle Crosstalk System in Rats”.


Nicholas and Jon Present at World Congress of Biomechanics

July 11, 2018

Nicholas and Jon both gave talks at the recent World Congress of Biomechanics conference held in Dublin. They both did great jobs representing OML on the international stage!  There was also some time for socializing with other NCSU/UNC BME labs. Our department was well-represented!


Jacque Received the World Changer Award

June 21, 2018

Jacque was recently bestowed with the NC State World Changer Award! She was nominated for her work in K12 outreach, specifically with National Biomechanics Day and the Engineering Bits & Bytes Days, by Dr. Laura Bottomley and her staff at The Engineering Place.

Congratulations Jacque, we’re all super impressed and one day we’ll be able to say “we knew her when…


National Biomechanics Day Awards

June 20, 2018

Our lab and department has won not one but TWO awards for our National Biomechanics Day efforts!

First of all, Stephanie and Maggie won the Biomechanics Art competition. Check out their awesome graphic:

Also, we won one of the 2018 Greatest Impact awards for our event in April. Congratulations to Nicholas, who put the entry together, and everyone who helped us to have a successful event. Check out the Facebook post to see the award announcement.


OML’s First PhD Student Graduates

May 14, 2018

Congratulations to Dr. Hui Cong, who graduated Saturday, May 12. She is our lab’s first PhD graduate, and was co-advised by Jacque and Dr. Martin King.


Maggie Presents her Research at the NC State Undergraduate Research Symposium (and wins an award!)

April 18, 2018

Maggie presented a poster on the rat forelimb unloading project that she and Sophie as working on at the Annual Undergraduate Research Symposium earlier today. She did a great job explaining the project’s motivation and initial results!

UPDATE: Maggie won an award for her poster! Sigma Xi, the Scientific Research Society, named it one of the outstanding presentations at this year’s Undergraduate Research Symposium. See the award announcement here.


Hui wins Best Oral Presentation Award

April 18, 2018

Dr. Hui Cong won the award for “Best Oral Presentation Award for the Materials Innovation Category” at the College of Textiles Research Open House held in Hunt Library on April 16th. Here are a few photos of her being presented this award by Dr. King and Dr. Rust.

Congratulations!


National Biomechanics Day 2018

April 12, 2018

Yesterday was our favorite day of the year, once again! No, not Christmas (though we do love presents)… it was National Biomechanics Day! We had nearly 250 students and teachers come visit us at NC State. Due to having so many visitors, we split the event between Engineering Building 3 (our home) and the nearby Hunt Library. The visiting students had a great time, and we like to think they learned something. The scientists also had a great time getting students more excited about biomechanics.

We can’t wait until 2019!  In the meantime, check out some photos of our lab in action.

 


Maggie and Stephanie win NBD Art Competition

April 11, 2018

Maggie and Stephanie won the 2018 National Biomechanics Day Art Competition, with their photo submission. The competition was sponsored by Stanford Sports Science. See the announcement on Twitter:

And check out their entry (click to enlarge)!