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Nanotechnology Initiative Presents Research Opportunities for Rensselaer Students
Troy, N.Y. — A new partnership between Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, Sandia National Laboratories, and a
select group of leading universities and corporations will
present Rensselaer graduate students with a host of new
cutting-edge internship and research experiences.
Rensselaer and the other institutions signed a memorandum of
understanding in August to establish the National Institute for
Nano-Engineering, or NINE. The partnership has been driven by
concerns over the health of America’s science and engineering
education and capacity for innovation, as highlighted in the
2005 report “Rising Above the Gathering Storm” from the
National Academies.
“This partnership allows Rensselaer to strengthen existing
ties and forge new relationships with global technology leaders
in industry, academia, and government,” said Rensselaer
President Shirley Ann Jackson, who was an author of the
National Academies study. “NINE is a shining example of how our
government can reach out to academia and industry for the
purpose of energizing and educating young people in the
sciences and engineering, and in helping our nation maintain
its leadership role in the world economy.”
“Our successful and highly visible nanotechnology center and
our outstanding materials science program are the reasons that
we were invited to be a member of the prestigious NINE
partnership,” said Alan Cramb, dean of Rensselaer’s School of
Engineering. “Giving our faculty members and students
unfettered access to Sandia’s stellar research staff and
facilities will only strengthen Rensselaer’s reputation as a
nanotechnology leader and as one of the world’s leading
universities for engineering research and education.”
The goal of NINE is to broaden students’ education through a
unique team research experience by engaging in
multidisciplinary teams working on pre-competitive research in
leading-edge technical areas. Breakthrough discoveries in
nanoengineering are anticipated and students will gain rich
technical experience and breadth by collaborating with top
institutions around the country. NINE will also expose students
to other key aspects of science and engineering, including
business, legal, political, and social issues.
David Duquette, a professor at Rensselaer and head of the
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, is overseeing
the school’s involvement in NINE. Duquette said NINE’s focus on
materials science in nanotechnology plays to Rensselaer’s
strengths, and will lead to exciting research opportunities for
students. Partner companies will share industry-level
nanotechnology and materials science challenges to NINE, which
in turn will recruit faculty and students from partner
universities to collaborate and research the topic at
Sandia.
“Our students will be expected to spend a considerable
amount of time at Sandia, anywhere from three months to a
year,” Duquette said. “It will be an exciting program for
Rensselaer.”
Duquette said the program will likely grow over time and new
opportunities for Rensselaer faculty and students will emerge.
This summer marked the beginning of the NINE technical projects
and an initial education program at Sandia, in which two
Rensselaer graduate students participated. The NINE program
also plans to reach out to teachers and pre-college students to
raise awareness about nanotechnology and materials science
engineering.
Sandia will oversee the partnership from its Albuquerque,
N.M., and Livermore, Calif., facilities. Sandia is a
multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a
Lockheed Martin company, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s
National Nuclear Security Administration.
NINE could be a prototype of a national innovation hub for
engineering education and innovation analogous to what is going
on around the globe in other countries, Sandia said. The
recently enacted America COMPETES Act supports the
establishment of Innovation Institutes to address science and
engineering discovery and education.
President Jackson recently applauded the passing of the
America COMPETES Act as a vital step for addressing the need of
the United States to sustain its national capacity for
innovation. Jackson has long warned of what she has dubbed a
“Quiet Crisis” in America — the threat to our nation’s capacity
to innovate due to reduced support for research and the looming
shortage in the nation’s science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics workforce. The impending work force shortfall
results from a record number of retirements on the horizon in
these fields, and not enough students in the pipeline to fill
the vacancies.
According to Jackson, if the United States is to maintain
its leadership in science and technology, it will require a
significant increase in the number of people choosing to pursue
careers in these fields. She has urged a national focus on
energy research as a focal point to excite and encourage
greater new interest and innovation. Jackson said addressing
the world’s energy needs in an environmentally sustainable way
is the central challenge of our time, and holds the potential
to invigorate today’s science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics workforce in much the same way the race to the moon
propelled those fields in the 1960s.
Along with Rensselaer, the initial NINE members include
Intel Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp., IBM, Lockheed Martin Corp.,
Corning Inc., Goodyear Tire and Rubber, University of
Wisconsin, University of California at Davis, University of
Florida, Yale University, Harvard University, University of
Texas at Austin, University of Illinois, Rice, Notre Dame,
University of New Mexico, and Harvey Mudd College. Inclusion in
the partnership was by invitation only.
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Published
September 10,
2007 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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