Patents mark year of breakthroughs at the College of Engineering
Inventive faculty strengthen the economy and attract national recognition.
The following is an excerpt. Read the full article: 2024 Patent Luncheon Marks a Year of Engineering Breakthroughs, College of Engineering News, Mar. 12, 2024.
Every year, leaders from Tech Launch Arizona and the College of Engineering gather to award medallions to the researchers and professors recently granted patents for inventions that better the human condition.
Attendees at this year’s Feb. 28 event celebrated Engineering’s inventors for improving health care and accelerating computing, among other achievements.
“Thank you for being engaged with us,” Doug Hockstad, assistant vice president of Tech Launch Arizona, the University of Arizona’s commercialization arm, told the engineers. “Getting a patent issued is a national acknowledgment of the importance of an invention,” he said, adding that college faculty were involved in over 20% of the university’s patents for the past year.
The following is a full list of Engineering faculty members who received medallions.
Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering
Peiwen Li – Heat Recovery Apparatus, System and Method
Biomedical Engineering
Marvin Slepian – Systems and Methods for Analyzing Platelet Function; Methods for Determining Cell Stiffness; and Breathing Signatures in Respiratory Disease
Chemical and Environmental Engineering
Dominic Gervasio (retired) – A System for Leaching Metal and Storing Energy
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Salim Hariri – SeVA: Senior’s Virtual Assistant
Ivan Djordjevic – Probabilistically Coded Fronthaul Networks
Wolfgang Fink – Automated Network-On-Chip Design
Materials Science and Engineering
Pierre Deymier – Sound System With Fermionic Quantum-Like Behavior
Douglas Loy – Bridged Polysilsesquioxane Based Sunscreens
Systems and Industrial Engineering
Mohammed Shafae – Sensor Signal Prediction at Unreported Frequencies
Young-Jun Son (former faculty member) – Simulation-Based Resource and Layout Optimization