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Program Highlights Research Exposure: Students are part of a faculty and graduate research group project. Activities: Weekly brown bag seminars; GRE and resume preparation; presentation and publication workshops; seminars on how to choose and apply to graduate school. Site Visits: Tour NASA Johnson Space Center’s Multi- Functional Nano-Materials Labs; campus facility tours; Microscopy and Imaging Center; and Materials and Characterization Facility. Publications: Students prepare a research plan, progress reports, presentations, and a final report in technical journal format, which may be submitted to a refereed journal. Objectives Emphasize multifunctional materials research across multiple disciplines with application for a variety of engineering systems. Conduct research at the nano- level with an appreciation of its impact at the system design level. Determine the impact nanotechnology could have on the component and system designs. Be exposed to concepts of technology innovation for emerging multifunctional engineering systems. Coordinators: Dr. Jim Boyd Dr. Jacques Richard Kristi Shryock REU Site: Multifunctional Materials Systems at Texas A&M University Aerospace Engineering PI: Dr. Dimitris Lagoudas This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. EEC-100 5178 Co-PIs: Dr. Tahir Cagin Dr. Jaime Grunlan Dr. H.J. Sue Dr. John Whitcomb Research Highlights Metal plateMetal plate Di ele ctr ic m at eri al plasmaplasma HVHV Modeling Plasma-Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) Fluid-structure Co-simulation of Convection for Shape Memory Alloy Applications Fluid exhibiting a quadratic velocity profile. Application Details To participate in the program, students must: Have an interest in and a desire to actively participate in on- going research projects; Have a minimum 3.25 cumulative GPA; Major in engineering or related science or math curriculum (e.g., physics, chemistry, etc.) with an interest in materials- related research; Have completed sophomore year (at least 60 hours) by the end of Spring 2011; Plan to graduate no sooner than December 2011; and Be a U.S. citizen or permanent resident. For more information regarding the program, please contact: Dr. Jacques C. Richard, richard@tamu.edu or Dr. James Boyd, jgboyd@tamu.edu For application questions, please contact: Kristi Shryock 3141 TAMU, 750 HRBB, College Station, TX 77843-3141, kristis@tamu.edu Fax: 979-845-6051 Application Deadline: Monday, February 28, 2011 by 5:00 pm CST Program Participants Notified: March, 31, 2011 Program Dates: May 31 - August 8, 2011 Or visit our website at: Financial Support Each participant will receive a stipend of $5,000 for the 10-week program. The program will cover on-campus housing expenses. Students choosing to live off- campus may receive monthly assistance for rent. Travel expenses up to $400 will be provided for those participants traveling from out of state to attend the program. Participants will register as students, and the program will cover tuition and fees for summer admission to Texas A&M University. The program is coordinated with the Texas A&M Dwight Look College of Engineering’s Student Services and Academic Programs (ESSAP) Undergraduate Summer Research Grant (USRG) (http://eapo.tamu.edu/usrg) and the Texas A&M Office of Undergraduate Research (http://ugr.tamu.edu/). http://aero.tamu.edu/research/undergraduate/research-experience-undergraduates
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