Daniel Gelbart, Adjunct Professor, to receive honourary doctorate

Daniel Gelbart, Adjunct Professor, to receive honourary doctorate

Daniel Gelbart

Daniel Gelbart, Adjunct Professor in Mechanical Engineering, has been chosen to receive the honourary degree Doctor of Science, honoris causa, at the May 2009 convocation.

Dan Gelbart is a gifted inventor and entrepreneur with a remarkably fertile and prolific mind. He has over 100 patents to his name. Many of his main achievements have been made through his company, Creo Products, Inc., which he co-founded with Dr. Ken Spencer in 1984. He developed revolutionary printing and imaging technology that set his company entirely apart from the prevailing techniques. Dan was also remarkably perceptive and innovative in his personnel policies, with Creo gaining numerous “best employer” awards both provincially and nationally. Through both his technical excellence and entrepreneurial skills, Dan grew the company to over 4000 employees by the time of its purchase by Kodak in 2005 for $1 billion.

Dan Gelbart has now taken on entirely new challenges in the medical field, and is the Technology Advisor for Kardium Inc., a developer of medical devices to address cardiovascular disease. His energy and inventive imagination are unabated, and we can expect that the same personal forces that caused Creo to grow to be the largest high-technology company in BC, will cause Kardium to grow and become a major player on the world stage.

Dan has made many major contributions to Mechanical Engineering and to several other UBC departments. In Mechanical Engineering, he is an active member of the departmental Industrial Advisory Committee. For several years he has lectured on technical design to the second year undergraduate students. This year, he is teaching a graduate course about industrial sensors and actuators, for which he is freely giving his time and personally providing all needed equipment and material resources.

The Mechanical Engineering Department is proud to be associated with Mr Dan Gelbart, and warmly congratulates him on being chosen to receive an honourary doctorate at UBC. Mr Gelbart will be granted the degree, Doctor of Science, honoris causa, at the convocation to be held at the Chan Centre at 1:30pm on Tuesday 26 May, 2009.

Mech Department welcomes new Professor, Dr. Hongshen (Hong) Ma.

Mechanical Engineering is pleased to welcome Dr. Hongshen (Hong) Ma to the Department. Dr. Ma earned his B.A.Sc. in Engineering Physics (Electrical Engineering Option) from UBC in 2001, where he was a Wesbrook Scholar. With financial support from NSERC Graduate Fellowships, Dr. Ma conducted graduate studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he earned his M.Sc. from the Media Laboratory. He completed his Ph.D. in the Department of Electrical Engineering at MIT in 2007, working under the supervision of a Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Following completion of his Ph.D., Dr. Ma was a Postdoctoral Associate at MIT, where he was an award-winning instructor and an active biomedical device researcher.

Dr. Ma has already begun collaborating at UBC with faculty in Urologic Sciences, and has research interests in MEMS, sensors, and nano-scale phenomena. Dr. Ma’s unique background in both Electrical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering makes him eminently qualified to be a Mechatronics specialist in the Department. The Department of Mechanical Engineering is extremely pleased to have been able to recruit a scholar of Dr. Ma’s quality and breadth.

Department welcomes new Assistant Professor Dr. Srikanth Phani

The Department of Mechanical Engineering is pleased to welcome Dr. Srikanth Phani to the Department. Dr. Phani joins the Department following receipt of a B. Tech. from Nagarjuna University, a M.Sc. from the Indian Institute of Science (Bangalore) and a Ph.D. in Engineering from Cambridge University in 2004. While attending Cambridge, Dr. Phani was the recipient of several fellowships, including the Cambridge Nehru Fellowship and the Ford of Britain Fellowship. Following 3 years as a Research Associate at Cambridge, Dr. Phani joined the University of Bath for 2 years as an Academic Research Fellow, prior to accepting a position as Assistant Professor at UBC in November 2008.

Dr. Phani is author or co-author of 12 journal publications in prestigious journals such as the Journal of Sound and Vibration, the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, IEEE Sensors, and the ASME Journal of Applied Mechanics. Dr. Phani has research interests that encompass applied mechanics of materials, dynamics and vibrations, MEMS, and biomedical devices. The Department of Mechanical Engineering is extremely pleased to have a scholar of Dr. Phani’s calibre join our Department.

Faculty members awarded Strategic Grant from NSERC

Two Mechanical Engineering faculty members and their co-investigator have been awarded a Strategic Grant from the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) for their proposed work in improving human-computer interaction.

The project, entitled “HALO: Transparent Guidance of Networked Interactions through a Haptic-Affect Loop,” will be investigated by Drs. Karon Maclean (Associate Professor in Computer Science and a recently reappointed Associate in Mechanical Engineering), Elizabeth Croft (Professor in Mechanical Engineering) and Joanna McGrenere (Associate Professor in Computer Science).

The project will address a challenge many people face – sensory and cognitive overload from computers, phones, iPods and all of the other interfaces we deal with from day-to-day to receive networked information and communications. The core innovation is the Haptic-Affect Loop (HALO), which will sense the users reaction to an environment or situation to trigger positive changes while providing immediate, unintrusive feedback to the user about the change through vibro-tactile signals. Ultimately this will lead to devices that will automatically respond to our changing needs and interests – in a truly personalized way.

Pro-Neck-Tor named Popular Science’s Best of What’s New

A sports helmet invented by UBC researchers has been named a Winner of a 2008 Popular Science Best of What’s New award in the Personal Health category.

The Pro-Neck-Tor helmet, co-developed by Mechanical Engineering Prof. Peter Cripton and PhD candidate Tim Nelson, has been shown in preliminary testing to reduce direct impact to the neck by up to 56 per cent.

Revealed every December, the Popular Science magazine’s Best of What’s New awards are presented to 100 new products and technologies spanning 11 categories.

Featured in UBC Pro-Neck-Tor press release, Popular Science article, and Pro-Neck-Tor web site.

UBC engineers recognized for innovative new pulp screen technology

The British Columbia Innovation Council (BCIC) has awarded two Mechanical Engineering faculty members and their collaborators the 2008 Lieutenant Governor’s Technology Innovation Award.

The team was comprised of:
Carl Ollivier-Gooch, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering, UBC
James Olson, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering, UBC
Robert Gooding, Vice President of Technology, Advanced Fiber Technologies
Mark Martinez, Associate Professor of Chemical & Biological Engineering, UBC

“The Lieutenant Governor’s Technology Innovation Award recognizes new and highly innovative technologies that are based on applied research conducted in British Columbia,” said Soren Harbel, VP Innovation Development, BCIC. “This team has demonstrated exemplary innovation with the new advanced pulp screen technology by taking an idea common in the field of aircraft design and applying it to the pulp and paper industry.”

“The highly innovated new pulp screen technology developed by this small group has had a substantial, nearly immediate, impact on the pulp and paper industry—one of Canada’s (and British Columbia’s) largest manufacturing and export industries,” says Dr. Elizabeth Croft, Professor and Associate Head, Department of Mechanical Engineering, UBC.

About the British Columbia Innovation Council
British Columbia Innovation Council is the lead organization charged with advancing innovation and commercialization in British Columbia. It is focused on accelerating the growth of our science and technology communities and competitively positioning British Columbia in the global science and technology economy in order to provide significant employment opportunities and a high standard of living for British Columbians.