News
Creating a 'coral reef' of heat sinks to cool high-powered Intel chips
Could a "gravity battery" work in a residential home?
Sustainable energy sources like wind and solar present a challenge: how do you store excess energy during periods of overproduction for when you really need it? Some large-scale utilities have turned to mechanical energy storage: lifting heavy weights or pumping water uphill into a reservoir. Once that energy is needed, the weight is released and its mechanical energy powers a generator that produces electricity.
These mechanical batteries have been proven to work on a large scale, but never at the scale of a single residential home. A team of Purdue University undergraduates undertook a study to investigate whether a “gravity battery” could be made small enough to fit into a single-family home.
Katherine Rumsey: track star and ME student
Katherine Rumsey, a junior in mechanical engineering at Purdue, spends her time balancing an ME student workload, and running around 45 miles a week.
Neera Jain and George Chiu recognized by ASME
Neera Jain and George Chiu have each been recognized by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) at the 2024 Modeling, Estimation, and Control Conference in Chicago.
Purdue ME Merch Store now open!
Prototypes and patents: Purdue Engineers and IU Maurer Law students team up on innovations
The future of sustainable aviation: artificial intelligence for new clean propulsion models
As a leader in propulsion technology, Purdue University is always searching for innovative ways to make aviation more sustainable. Their latest initiative is TRANSDIFFUSE, a €10 million collaborative project which promises to revolutionize the field of turbomachinery through an innovative model based on artificial intelligence.
Learning table tennis with augmented reality
Table tennis has experienced a worldwide surge of popularity as a competitive sport. But finding qualified coaches to teach table tennis can be difficult, costly, and time-consuming. That’s why Purdue University researchers have developed a 3D augmented-reality table tennis instruction system, giving instant feedback to beginning players.