Page 16 - Kettering Magazine Spring 2017
P. 16

expAnding reseArCh opporTuniTies




         nsF grAnTs





         have Created unique research


         opportunities for students







                  B y P aT r i c k h ay e S
                                              ince 2012, Kettering university faculty have
                                         sreceived nine major research instrumentation

                                          (mri) grants from the national science Foundation
                                          – more than any university in michigan during that

                                          period
                   “KeTTering is

                     deFiniTelY A         These grants, which support the acquisition of rare and high-tech lab equipment,
           leAder in Terms oF             have improved the university’s research capabilities and provided more
                                          opportunities for students to use unique equipment as undergraduates.
            puTTing AdVAnCed
                                          “Kettering is definitely a leader in terms of putting advanced technological tools
                TeChnologiCAl             into the hands of undergraduates,” said dr. James zhang, provost and senior Vice
                                          president for Academic Affairs. “our students have opportunities they wouldn’t
                      Tools inTo
                                          typically receive until the graduate level at many other institutions.”
                   The hAnds oF
                                          here is a summary of what faculty have done with those grants.
            undergrAduATes.”
                                          nanotechnology expansion
                    - Dr. James Zhang,    dr. ronald J. Tackett, faculty member in the Kettering university department of
                           Provost and    physics, along with collaborators from multiple disciplines across campus have
                  Senior Vice President    been awarded a national science Foundation - major research instrumentation
                   for Academic Affairs   (nsF-mri) grant for $452,000. The grant allowed Tackett to acquire a high-
                                          resolution transmission electron microscope (Tem) with energy dispersive
                                          spectroscopy capabilities to support ongoing investigations and potentially
                                          advance materials science and nanotechnology research and teaching at
                                          Kettering.

                                          The Tem was installed on campus in october 2016 and has already been
                                          incorporated into Kettering’s academic curriculum and for industry and community
                                          outreach.

                                          “it’s certainly opened up the avenue for more possible collaboration with industry
                                          and also outreach,” Tackett said.








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