Research 2014
Research 2014
Research 2014
New cardiac
arteries grown
from stem cells
bypass the pitfalls
of artificial grafts.
Hip implants
etched with
nanotubes roll out
a welcome mat for
healing bone cells.
THE
FUTURE
HUMAN
New hope
at the
crossroads
of engineering
and medicine
Magnetic sensors
beam good news
and bad
from deep inside
an artificial knee.
A prosthetic
ankle brings a
natural stride to
an artificial limb.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Research in brief
From toxic algae to cancer-killing rice
12
13
Beyond silicon
A transistor with quantum dots, nanotubes, and
not a semiconductor in sight
13
22
26
28
Superior Ideas:
Making research reality
22
30
26
30
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
Research I N B R I E F
cientists from the Michigan Tech Research Institute (MTRI), in Ann Arbor, are using
satellite data to find harmful algal blooms (HABs) in the Great Lakes and determine
what threats they may pose to water quality and public health.
Theres algae in all the Great Lakes, but in some areas, agricultural runoff can cause a
massive overgrowth, enough to clog water intake pipes, degrade drinking water, and
potentially sicken people and animals. Climate change is another driver; algae tend to
thrive in warmer water, and the Great Lakes temperature is on the rise.
The project generates HAB maps of portions of Lake Erie, Lake Huron, and Lake
Michigan. The maps are posted at www.mtrihabsmapping.org. The data will be useful
to fishermen, sailors, tourists, and public water system managers, not to mention the
public, said Robert Shuchman, a lead scientist on the project. You dont want your
grandkids going to the beach and jumping into pea soup, he said.
Petra Huentemeyer
The cell with the 3D graphene counter electrode converted 7.8 percent of the
suns energy into electricity, nearly as much as the conventional solar cell using
costly platinum (8 percent).
Synthesizing the 3D honeycomb graphene is neither expensive nor difficult,
said Hu, and making it into a counter electrode posed no special challenges.
10
Steel this
printer
Michigan Tech
scientists build an
affordable 3D
metal printer
forget is that guns, like agricultural technologies, are not inherently good or bad.
Harnessing our agricultural technology
has allowed us to feed 7 billion people,
yet we abuse it. We allowed about fifteen
thousand people to starve to death today
while more than two-thirds of Americans
are overweight or obese. Similarly, guns
can be used by freedom fighters to overthrow dictatorships or by oligarchs to
throttle democracy.
Despite the dangers, he believes that
the good to come from open-source 3D
metal printing will far outweigh the evil.
Small and medium-sized enterprises
would be able to build parts and equipment quickly and easily using downloadable, free and open-source designs, which
could revolutionize the economy for the
benefit of the many.
I really dont know if we are mature
enough to handle it, Pearce added cautiously, but I think that with an opensource approach, we are within reach of
a Star Trek-like, post-scarcity society, in
which replicators can create a vast array
of objects on demand, resulting in wealth
for everyone at very little cost. Pretty soon,
well be able to make almost anything.
11
Beyond silicon
A nano-transistor
made without
semiconductors
BY MARCIA GOODRICH
F
Yoke Khin Yap
12
assembly at room temperature, and something interesting happened. Electrons jumped very precisely
from gold dot to gold dot, a phenomenon known as
quantum tunneling.
Imagine that the nanotubes are a river, with an
electrode on each bank. Now imagine some very tiny
stepping stones across the river, said Yap. The electrons hopped between the gold stepping stones. The
stones are so small you can only get one electron on
the stone at a time. Every electron is passing the same
way, so the device is always stable.
They had made a transistor without a semiconductor. When sufficient voltage was applied, it switched
to a conducting state. When the voltage was low or
turned off, it reverted to its natural state as an insulator.
Furthermore, no electrons from the gold dots
escaped into the insulating BNNTs, thus keeping the
tunneling channel cool. In contrast, silicon is subject
to such leakage, which wastes energy in electronic
devices and generates a lot of heat.
Other people have made transistors that exploit
quantum tunneling, says Michigan Tech physicist
John Jaszczak, who developed the theoretical framework for Yaps experimental research. However, those
tunneling devices have only worked in conditions that
would discourage the typical cellphone user.
They only operate at liquid-helium temperatures,
said Jaszczak.
The secret to Yaps gold-and-nanotube device is
its submicroscopic size: one micron long and about
20 nanometers wide. The gold islands have to be on
the order of nanometers across to control the electrons
at room temperature, Jaszczak said. If they are too
big, too many electrons can flow. In this case, smaller
is truly better: Working with nanotubes and quantum dots gets you to the scale you want for electronic
devices.
A new nano-surface that could slash the failure rate of titanium implants,
from hip replacements to new teeth
13
14
Infusing an
artificial
foot with a
natural gait
15
Arteries in aisle 9
BY MARCIA GOODRICH
Feng Zhao
dreams of
the day when
replacement
blood vessels
will be as
easy to buy as
garden hoses.
Feng Zhao hopes that stem-cell tubes like the one on the
right will someday be used to restore blood flow to the
human heart.
16
17
A joint venture
B Y T O N Y F I T Z P AT R I C K
Magnetoelastic
materials in
the heart of
artificial knees
may someday
telegraph their
inner ouch
and help make
it go away.
18
What Im trying to address is the surface-to-surface contact information, Ong says. Doctors dont
have information on what the metal attached to the
plastic cartilage is doing while the patient is jumping,
twisting, or dancing, even.
While his sensor is wireless, to make it work will
require a fairly simple, inconspicuous battery-driven
device worn outside the body atop the knee. This
device would generate the magnetic field that converts
the mechanical force the sensor gathers into magnetic
signals, which would be read by an external computer.
Besides providing a real-time analysis and functioning wirelessly, the sensor has other advantages.
It can be made to degrade over a period of time,
if needed, Ong says. Theres no harm to the body.
Because its biocompatible, you wouldnt have to worry
if the sensor were exposed.
Another plus is that magnetic energy penetrates
the body much more easily than ultrasound or acoustic energy, which can be disrupted by bones.
Ong and his collaborators have done preliminary tests on simple animal models, with promising
results. The next step would be to implant a sensor in
large animals and eventually humans. He also aims to
improve its performance; he is working on a denser
profile with higher resolution and more-complex data.
Ong believes the technology holds promise in other
arenas. While my major thrust is with knee implants,
Im also looking at using magnetoelastic materials to
improve cardiovascular stents, he said.
Ultimately, he hopes to use their unique properties to improve medical implants throughout the body,
from head to toe and all places in between.
19
20
When an
orthopedic
implant goes
bad, there
are no easy
solutions. A
Michigan Tech
scientist aims
to keep them
from failing in
the first place.
are posts, usually made of titanium, that are surgically placed into the jawbone and topped with artificial teeth. Occasionally, they fail or become infected;
the same nanotube coating that could improve knee
replacements could also brighten somebodys smile.
The nanotube surface has yet another attribute that
Shokuhfar believes could reduce the failure rate in all
types of titanium implants. It can serve as a drug-delivery system for antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs,
or even silver nanoparticles. Silver has antimicrobial
properties, and we are capable of obtaining a dose that
can kill microbes but would not hurt healthy cells and
tissues, she said.
On the horizon are animal tests and eventually clinical trials. Because the nanotubes are simply
another form of titanium dioxide, Shokuhfar hopes
the approval process will be short.
We want to get to the clinical stage as soon as possible, so we can get this out there to people who need
it, she said. I hope that in the future, none of these
patients will ever cry again.
Tolou Shokuhfar
with a conventional
hip implant. If they
were etched with
nanotubes, such
implants could speed
healing.
21
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B Y J E N N I F E R D O N O VA N
veryone knows what drones are, right? Drones are unmanned flying machines,
and theyve gained visibilityand notorietyin military and spying operations.
But they have a wide variety of friendly, beneficial applications here at home.
Researchers at Michigan Tech are working with three different kinds of unmanned
vehiclesaka dronesand not all of them fly through the air.
The Michigan Tech Research Institute (MTRI) in Ann Arbor is looking into the use of
drones in transportation. MTRI scientists and faculty from the main Michigan Tech campus
are using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to help government agencies develop low-cost, highly
efficient ways to handle tasks that range from mapping the condition of unpaved roads to understanding traffic jams and evaluating the conditions inside culverts. The research will help transportation agencies save money and reduce risk to staff who would otherwise have to go on a roadway or
bridge, or inside a confined space, to understand infrastructure conditions there.
Meanwhile, a graduate student in the School of Technology is developing a fixed-wing, autonomous
aerial vehicle to take high-resolution digital images from heights of three hundred feet. And the Great
Lakes Research Center is saving time, money, and lives by checking underwater pipelines, cables, and municipal water intakes with Iver 3, the latest generation of autonomous underwater vehicle.
Using aerial imagery to understand conditions on the ground is nothing new, MTRI Senior Research Scientist
Colin Brooks points out. During the Civil War, the Union Army used balloons to take photos of Confederate
earthworks, he said. Were just making data-gathering quicker, easier, safer, and more detailed for rapidly understanding our transportation infrastructure.
Brooks, who specializes in remote sensing technology and geographic information systems (GIS), heads MTRIs
project team evaluating uses of UAVs.
22
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UAVs like this one
at the Michigan Tech
Research Institute
may soon be cruising
Americas highways
and bridges and
reporting back on their
condition.
23
Now about those drones at MTRI down in Ann Arbor, where they
call them unmanned aerial vehicles, the preferred moniker of the UAV
industry. They look like miniature helicopters. MTRI is currently using two
UAVs: a Bergen hexacopter and a DJI Phantom quadcopter. The hexacopter,
the larger of the two, has six blades and a four-foot rotor span. It costs $5,000
as configured for research, weighs just over eleven pounds, and can fly a highend, multimedia camera like a Nikon D800. The smaller UAV has four blades that
spin in a two-foot diameter. It weighs only two pounds, costs just $700, and can fly
smaller cameras like the GoProa favorite among action sports users. Both have
cameras, GPS, and on-board stability systems.
Both UAVs take full-sized, high-definition digital images, with the higher resolution
ones capable of better than one-centimeter 3D resolution. They can show us how many
potholes are in a road and how deep they are, the degree of crown in a roadway, identify
rutting conditions, washboarding, and drainage issues, and evaluate the density and severity
of road and bridge problems, says Brooks. Up to now, agencies responsible for roads have been
reactive, checking out problems after someone calls to complain, he explains. This technology
turns reactive responses to proactive responses through improved asset management practices.
The UAVs flight is controlled by a pilot on the ground, reminiscent of remote-control model
airplanes, but if they have to, the vehicles can find their own way home. They fly about one hundred
feet above the ground, well below the Federal Aviation Administrations permitted ceiling for model
aircraft of four hundred feet.
And MTRI is experimenting with another, even smaller quadcopter, the open-source Crazyflie, for
inspecting confined spaces to see if its safe to send a person inside. It weighs two-thirds of an ounce and
costs $179. Its controller is bigger than the vehicle, Brooks remarks.
A ROBOTIC AQUAMAN
Based at the Great Lakes Research Center (GLRC) on the Michigan Tech campus waterfront, the autonomous
underwater vehicle (AUV) Iver 3 has been out on two test runsone in the Keweenaw Waterway and one in the
Straits of Mackinacand it performed like a superhero, said Guy Meadows, the GLRC director.
Iver has two dual processor computers on board, Wi-Fi, GPS, water flow and speed-of -sound sensors, and the latest
in sonar technology. It can dive 330 feet and cover 30 miles of water on missions up to 12 hours. Iver returned to the factory this winter to be fitted with a high-definition camera, lights, and a satellite phone.
Iver is an impressive research tool. You end up with a survey-quality map of the bottom over the selected swath,
Meadows said. The map size depends on the altitude of the robot above the lake floor, but at ten meters above the bottom,
you can map an entire football field.
Meadows hopes to use Iver to gain an understanding of the currents flowing through the Straits of Mackinac. Our
new supercomputer at the GLRC lets us numerically predict the flow through the Straits, but we need a tool to validate
this information. Thats where Iver comes in, he said. Using its sensors, Iver should be able to give researchers an accurate
understanding of the movement of currents in this area as well as the bottom sediments.
Ivers uses are not limited to the behavior of currents. Nina Mahmoudian, assistant professor of mechanical engineeringengineering mechanics and an expert on autonomous control of robots, is working with GLRC researchers to
develop algorithms that will allow Iver to track long underwater features. Those could be pipelines crossing the Great
Lakes, or they could be underwater communication cables, Meadows said. If we decided to develop offshore windpower systems in the Great Lakes, it could follow those power cables. Most importantly, it could check municipal
water intakes.
THE FIRST RESPONDER
Meanwhile, in the School of Technology, Loakeim Tellidis, a masters student from Greece,is working on
a fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicle.
Tellidiss UAV costs less than $2,000 to build. It takes pictures with two-inchresolution from 300 feet
up and has a 50-minute flight time. And, says Tellidis, it is more stable than the copter-like UAVs and
can cover more distance.
We can use it almost everywhere, said Tellidiss advisor, Associate Professor Eugene Levin.
Agriculture, floods, fires, transportation infrastructure, you just name it.
24
See hunt
Researcher Colin Tyrrell
chaperones Michigan Techs
AUV in the University
diving pool. The vehicle
has also navigated wilder
waters, including the
Straits of Mackinac, where
it scanned a pipeline.
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25
From
cancer
treatment
to ion
thruster
The newest
little idea
for nanosat
micro rockets
26
anosatellites are cellphone-sized spacecraft that can perform simple, yet valuable,
space missions. Dozens of these little vehicles are now tirelessly orbiting the Earth
performing valuable functions for NASA, the Department of Defense, and even
private companies.
Nanosatellites borrow many of their components from terrestrial gadgets: miniaturized cameras, wireless radios, and GPS receivers that have been perfected for hand-held
devices are also perfect for spacecraft. However, says L. Brad King, nanosats require
something you will probably never be able to download from an app store: Even the
best smartphones dont have miniaturized rocket engines, so we need to develop them
from scratch.
Miniature rockets arent needed to launch a nanosatellite from Earth. The small vehicles can hitchhike with a regular rocket that is going that way anyway. But because they
are hitchhikers, these nanosats dont always get dropped off in their preferred location.
Once in space, a nanosatellite often needs some type of propulsion to move it from its
drop-off point into its desired orbit. Enter micro rocket engines.
For the last few years, researchers around the world have been trying to build such
rockets using microscopic hollow needles to electrically spray thin jets of fluid, which
push the spacecraft in the opposite direction. The fluid propellant is a special chemical
known as an ionic liquid. A single thruster needle is finer than a human hair, less than
one millimeter long, and produces a thrust force equivalent to the weight of a few grains
of sand. A few hundred of these needles fit in a postage-stamp-size package and produce
enough thrust to maneuver a nanosatellite.
These new electrospray thrusters face some design challenges, however. Because they
are so small and intricate, they are expensive to make, and the needles are fragile, says
PHOTO: BROCKIT
27
28
Developing an
open-source
concrete analysis
program
RESEARCHER:
Gerald Anzalone
FUNDS RAISED:
$8,000
Bringing mobile
medical stations to
remote Ghana
RESEARCHER:
Erik Wachlin
FUNDS RAISED:
$8,319
Jason Carter
FUNDS RAISED:
$24,875
Restoring coaster
brook trout
spawning sites
RESEARCHER:
Casey Huckins
FUNDS RAISED:
$10,000
29
Pay attention!
We live here!
Environmental history
professor Nancy Langston
visited far northern
Sweden to study the
impact of a proposed
open-pit mine on the
indigenous Smi people.
B Y M I C H A E L A G R E S TA
30
ast year, when Michigan Tech professor Nancy Langston arrived in the
mining city of Kiruna in far northern Sweden, it was just after Christmas
high season for tourists hoping to catch a glimpse of Santa Claus among
the frozen reindeer pastures. The arctic sun sat just below the horizon for several hours each day, suffusing the snowy boreal forests with an otherworldly
light. It was the coldest Ive ever been, but the most beautiful light and forest
Id ever seen, Langston says.
A visitor could be forgiven for assuming that the icy landscape beyond the
city would be uninhabited. Indeed, this is how the Swedish tourism industry
sells the regionas a pristine, empty landscape beyond the reach of humans.
The truth, Langston found, is quite the opposite. The indigenous Smi people have been living among and herding reindeer in the region for ten thousand years, at times suffering brutal repression from governments based in
southern Scandinavia. The kinds of ideas that theyre now selling, of Come
see this empty world, denies these humans, Langston says.
This willful ignorance of Smi land-use traditions becomes particularly
convenient whenever new mineral deposits are discovered in Smi territory.
31
32
C A RE E R A W A RD
ow risky would you think a surgery was if 95 percent of patients survive and fully recover? Would
you feel differently about that same surgery if the
doctor told you that 5 percent of patients die?
Edward Cokely would like to see all of us make
better choices about such weighty matters, from openheart surgery to investing all our savings in penny
stocks. The ability to grasp the consequences of decisions like these is known as risk literacy, and its not as
ephemeral as you might think. Theres even a test for
itmore on that later.
Its useful to be smart, but risk literacy is not really
about intelligence, says Cokely, an associate professor
of psychology in the Department of Cognitive and
Learning Sciences. Even very smart, well-educated
people struggle to understand information about risk,
which can lead to overconfidence and ill-informed,
even dangerous, decisions. Instead, risk literacy is
tightly linked to math skills, specifically statistical and
probabilistic reasoning.
In 2009, Cokely led a team of researchers at
Germanys Max Planck Institute for Human
Development that formulated one of the best tests of
risk literacy: the Berlin Numeracy Test. With only
two or three questions, we can identify who is likely to
be a good decision maker, said Cokely. For example,
we can predict who is likely to be tricked by manipulative advertising and political reports.
The test can also identify who will recognize risks
associated with household products, consumer debt,
and lifestyle choices. Our test also predicts whether
or not patients and their doctors are likely to share in
medical decision-making, said Cokely. Performance
on the test is even related to health outcomes like
heart attacks and strokes.
Since 2012, over forty thousand people in more
than a hundred countries have taken the test, found at
www.RiskLiteracy.org.
Unfortunately, being risk literate isnt always
enough. Often, key information isnt presented, so it
can be difficult for the average personrisk literate
or notto make informed decisions. Many types
of medical tests, like mammography and prostate
Good decisions
are less
about smarts
and more
about math
33
RE S E A RC H A W A RD
Charlie is
considered an
international
star in the field
of freshwater
zooplankton
ecology.
34
R AT H A W A RD
aterials science and engineering professor JiannYang Jim Hwang and 2012 PhD graduate
Zhiwei Peng have received Michigan Techs
2013 Bhakta Rath Research Award for their studies
on the use of microwaves in steelmaking.
They were nominated by Stephen Kampe, the St.
John Professor and chair of the materials science and
engineering department.
Kampe called Pengs work incredibly thorough
in scope and rigorous in its approach. He noted that
Hwang has researched microwave steelmaking for
years and has become a renowned authority on environmental and sustainability issues within the materials processing industries.
The researchers did theoretical and experimental work on using microwaves to heat materials, particularly magnetic substances, and developed ways
to improve microwaves heating efficiency. They also provided guidelines for
making large-scale microwave furnaces for industrial use. Pengs dissertation
research was an integral part of three grants totaling $2.6 million.
Their work has led to five books, twenty-five papers, and invitations to
prepare books on microwave heating.
Mingming Zhang of the Canadian steel and mining company
ArcelorMittal wrote that Pengs research attracted my attention because
of its huge potential in energy savings and environmental protection compared with conventional technologies, adding that the achievement is all the
more remarkable because steelmaking consumes more energy than any other
industry. Moreover, there is a great possibility to substantially reduce the
CO2, SOx and NOx emissions, contributing to an environmentally friendly
world, Zhang said.
Pengs solid foundation in math and science and his interdisciplinary
approach have been key to the projects success, said his advisor. He is not
afraid of challenges, and he willingly took courses from other departments
that advanced his research, Hwang said. By combining knowledge from
several disciplines, Zhiwei has developed a new field of research.
The award, endowed by Michigan Tech alumnus Bhakta Rath and his
wife, Sushama, recognizes a doctoral student at Michigan Tech and his/
her faculty advisor for exceptional research of particular value that anticipates the future needs of the nation while supporting advances in emerging
technology.
A technology
with huge
potential
in energy
savings and
environmental
protection.
35
GR A DU AT E RE S E A RC H
Zinc
The Goldilocks
material for stents?
BY MARCIA GOODRICH
36
U NDE RGR A DU AT E RE S E A RC H
louds arise out of nowhere and dissolve into nothingness, an intricate interaction of
heat and cold, dampness and dust. Michael Adler aims to describe a portion of that
dance in numbers, the sign language of physics.
Adler is a senior majoring in both physics and applied/computational
mathematics. An accomplished violinist, he is minoring in music,
sings with the Michigan Tech Concert Choir, and plays with
the Marquette and Keweenaw symphony orchestras. He
received the 2013 Provosts Award for Scholarship,
Michigan Techs highest honor for academic
excellence.
For his senior research project, Adler
is developing a mathematical model to
describe how clouds form, in collaboration with physics professor Raymond
Shaw. The model is based on RayleighBnard convection, which anyone who has
boiled water has observed, whether they know it or
not. As a fluid warms, currents rise and circulate, forming fountains and whirlpools. A similar pattern arises in the atmosphere
as air ascends and clouds condense. The main variable in Rayleigh-Bnard convection
is temperature, but because we are talking about clouds here, Adler is adding another,
water vapor.
Water vapor condenses as it rises and cools, which adds an extra level of complexity, said Adler. That means you have a latent heat release in a region where condensation is taking place. Its very interesting.
Adler will be graduating in May and hopes his model can be tested in Michigan
Techs new cloud chamber this spring. The chamber will generate clouds by cooling
the top surface and warming the bottom, so air plumes and water vapor are constantly rising and falling.
This isnt his first project. Since he enrolled at Tech, Adler has also been
involved in research on thermoelectric materials and high-performance computing. Last summer, he went to Europe on a German Academic Exchange
Service Research Internship to develop simulations of jet-engine combustion,
a far cry from his current work. That was very exciting, he said. It was a
completely different regime. Atmospheric flows are nice and calm for the
most part, and then theres this jet engine with supersonic flow and violent
reactions. It presents some challenging numerical issues.
Next fall, he plans to begin graduate studies in aerospace engineering. And hell be
continuing his music, both for love and for balance. It is such a relief to take your mind
off science and express the creative side a little more, he says.
38
Gifts 10%
All other sponsors 3%
Foreign 1%
Industry 9%
Sponsored awards
Fiscal year 2013
State of Michigan 4%
US Department
of Agriculture 5%
US Department
of Defense 35%
US Department
of Energy 7%
Federal 73%
US Department
of Transportation 9%
Federal awards
Fiscal year 2013
National Science
Foundation 27%
Research expenditures
(in millions of dollars)
70.0
60.4
60.4
56.6
72.0
70.7
63.5
44.2
Arts, Humanities, Business,
and Education
Science and Engineering
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
Michigan Tech
Iowa State University
7.0
3.5
Michigan State
University
Michigan Tech
7.0
2.5
5.2
University
of Michigan
4.5
5.9
Wayne State
University
2.9
2.4
39