Media

UF Article Showcases Professor Moghaddam’s Research on a New Membrane for Hemodialysis

Check out this article from UF on IMG professor Dr. Saeed Moghaddam that discusses his group’s research on a new graphene-oxide hemodialysis membrane! Awesome work!

Read the article here:

https://www.eng.ufl.edu/newengineer/carousel/uf-engineers-develop-new-membrane-that-improves-blood-dialysis/

IEEE Spectrum Features Low-power LiDAR-based MEMS Sensor from IMG

Check out this research performed by IMG member Dingkang Wang and former IMG professor Dr. Huikai Xie featured in IEEE Spectrum! Their LiDAR-based sensor made from MEMS mirrors is offered as a low power solution to support the Internet of Things. Excellent work!

https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/consumer-electronics/gadgets/new-lidar-sensor-uses-mirrors-to-achieve-high-efficiency

IMG Professor Dr. Saeed Moghaddam receives $1.89M grant from the U.S. Department of Energy

Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Professor Dr. Saeed Moghaddam has received a $1.89M grant from the United States Department of Energy to develop revolutionary cooling and heating systems here at the University of Florida. This new technology will lead to a future with more renewable energy sources! Click here for more details! 

 

IMG Faculty Release the IMG Annual Report for 2018

The IMG faculty are pleased to release the IMG annual report for the calendar year of 2018! This document is a record of the group activities, achievements and finances for the previous year. You are encouraged to refer to this document if needed.

The 2018 IMG Annual Report can be downloaded here: https://www.img.ufl.edu/about/IMG-annual-report

IMG Member Kartik Sondhi Accepted In IDTechEx Show and Publishes New Paper!

Longtime IMG member, Kartik Sondhi, is celebrating his recent paper titled “Characterization of Bending, Crease, Aging, and Immersion Effects on Flexible Screen-Printed Silver Traces” published in IEEE Transactions on Components, Packaging and Manufacturing Technology! He has also been accepted to the IDTechEx Show in Santa Clara this coming November! Congratulations!

His paper: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8851266

2017 IMG Annual Report

The IMG faculty are pleased to release the IMG annual report for the calendar year 2017. This document is a record of the group activities, achievements and finances for the previous year. You are encouraged to refer to this document if needed.

The 2017 IMG Annual Report can be downloaded here.

IMG Social Media Committee

The IMG Social Media Committee is now up and running! This committee will be working to promote IMG on social media platforms such as Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Furthermore, the committee is also looking for submissions of research images produced by IMG students, professors, and researchers! An image will be selected weekly as the "IMG Image of the Week" and posted on Twitter. Each month, one of these images will also be selected as the "IMG Image of the Month" and posted on the IMG website. Please see the flier above for more details. And be sure to follow IMG on Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn!

2016 IMG Annual Report

The IMG faculty are pleased to release the first IMG annual report for the calendar year 2016. This document is a record of the group activities, achievements and finances for the previous year. You are encouraged to refer to this document if needed.

The 2016 IMG Annual Report can be downloaded here.

Dr. Alex Phipps, selected as one of the Top Scientists and Engineers of the Year by the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research Development and Acquisition

Dr. Alex Phipps, 2010 ECE PhD and IMG alumnus was selected as one of the Top Scientists and Engineers of the Year by the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research Development and Acquisition.  Congratulations Alex!

•Dr. Alex Phipps: Selected in the Emergent Engineer Investigator category for his accomplishments in advancing wireless underwater power transfer technologies. “What we’re doing is looking to find a way for unmanned underwater vehicles to persist underwater for much greater periods of time and still be able to perform their mission without having to surface,” Phipps said. 

Read more