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Awards

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Clean sweep! ME students win first, second, and third

September 13, 2010 03:14 PM
Two students from BYU’s Mechanical Engineering Department made a clean sweep at the ASME Micro-and Nanosystems Photo Contest. Walter Fazio won 1st and 3rd places, and Greg Holst won 2nd place. The contest was held as part of the annual ASME International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & International Conference on Micro- and Nanosystems held in Montreal, Canada, from August 15-18, 2010.
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Professor Receives ASME Mechanisms & Robotics Award

May 10, 2010 05:07 PM
Professor Larry Howell received the Mechanisms & Robotics Award in the Design Engineering Division at the 2009 American Society of Mechanical Engineers International Design Engineering Conference (IDETC) held in San Diego, California. The Mechanisms & Robotics Award is given by the ASME Design Engineering Division to a scholar in this field for cumulative contributions to the field of mechanism design or theory. Having continued distinction in this field is a prerequisite to receiving this prestigious honor; receiving this award denotes a lifetime of achievement in design engineering.
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CMR Paper Receives Award

May 10, 2010 03:08 PM
Undergraduate student Sterling Anderson and ME Professor Dr. Brian Jensen received the "Compliant Mechanisms Award: Applications" in recognition of a prize winning paper. The award is presented annually to the authors of the best paper demonstrating an application of compliant mechanisms. The award was received at the ASME Mechanisms & Robotics Conference held in Brooklyn, New York, from August 4th-5th. This conference is the premier conference for work in compliant mechanisms, with papers from many researchers all over the world. This is the second year that BYU has won the award.
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Student receives 2nd place in International Mechanisms and Robot Design Competition

September 02, 2009 03:03 PM
Eric Stratton, an MS student in the CMR won 2nd place in the ASME International Student Mechanisms and Robot Design Competition, Graduate Division with his entry entitled, "Posterior Compliant Load-sharing Spinal Implant." The competition involved contestants submitting their written reports to academic and industrial judges.
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CMR Awarded Research Grant from the National Science Foundation

February 19, 2008 03:01 PM
On February 19, 2008, the National Science Foundation awarded the Compliant Mechanisms Research Lab a three-year research grant for developing a new class of mechanisms called "Lamina Emergent Mechanisms" (LEMs). LEMs are compliant mechanisms which are fabricated from one or more planar layers of material (lamina). When actuated, LEMs emerge from their initial planar state.
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2007 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences

September 09, 2007 02:58 PM
The International Design Engineering Technical Conferences, sponsored by ASME, were held the first week of September 2007 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The conference is attended annually by approximately 1,000 engineers from the industry and academia. The CMR lab was represented at the conference by five ME professors and 15 students or recent graduates from the program. Students took part by presenting papers and participating in the ASME Mechanism Design Competition. The BYU team was excited to bring home three awards (see related stories).
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Paper Earns Compliant Mechanisms Application Best-paper Award

September 07, 2007 02:55 PM
In September 2007, Steve Landon (a recent graduate), Spencer Magleby, and Brian Jensen won a best paper award at the 31st Mechanisms & Robotics Conference held as part of the ASME Design Engineering Technical Conferences in Las Vegas, Nevada. The paper, "A Compliant Rotating Joint for Deployable Wings on Small UAVs," applies compliant mechanism technology to wing storage on small Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAV). The design incorporates a bistable mechanism which enables the wings to extend for flight and then retract when the plane is stored. Possible applications include fitting a plane into a soldier's rucksack.
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PhD Student Places 2nd in International Design Competition

September 04, 2007 02:52 PM
Peter Halverson, a PhD student at Brigham Young University, won 2nd Place in the Graduate Division of the 2008 ASME Student Mechanisms Design Competition for his entry entitled "Contact-aided Compliant Mechanism Based Spinal Arthroplasty." The contest was part of the ASME Mechanisms & Robotics Conference held in Brooklyn, New York, held from August 4th-5th. Peter's goal was to produce a viable alternative to spinal fusion by designing a device that mimics the physiological motion of the spine. The presented design has the potential to restore both the quality and quantity of motion in the lower back as well as virtually eliminate wear, the number one cause of orthopedic loosening in hip and knee replacements.
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Student Receives State & National Awards

May 10, 2007 02:49 PM
Graduate student Quentin Aten was recognized for his work in the bio-medical application of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). On September 4, 2007, Quentin presented a poster and an oral presentation entitled "Out-of-Plane Cellular Manipulator" as part of the ASME Undergraduate Mechanism Design Competition in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was selected as one of four finalists to present at the conference, where he placed second overall.
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Best Paper Award at Micro- and Nanosystems Conference

May 10, 2007 02:47 PM
The Best Paper Award for the 1st International Conference on Micro- and Nanosystems was awarded to Tyler Waterfall, Kendall Teichert and Professor Brian Jensen. The conference was part of the 2007 ASME International Design Engineering Technical Conferences.
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