Research and Development Facility
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| Paul Rodriguez
and a VMC in the CNC shop. |
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Research facilities located in the Department of Chemical Engineering
include a fully-staffed Research and Development Facility. Ask the
manager Paul Rodriguez what they do in the Chemical Engineering Research
and Development Facility, and he’ll tell you “we build cool things.”
There are three other members of the Research and Development Facility
team in addition to Rodriguez: Bob Perkins (Undergraduate Lab Manager),
Fred McKenzie, and Joe Bell. These four are assisted by four student
workers in keeping the facility running and in tip-top shape.
Research and Development Facility Supports Upgrade of Undergraduate
Lab
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| Polymerization
Unit |
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Rodriguez and his team agree that the best part of their jobs is
that “the work is challenging and always changing.” This work includes
everything from actually designing the working parts of experiments
using AutoCAD and FeatureCAM to building the experiments themselves,
putting them in functional order, and maintaining their performance.
One example of this is the Polymerization Unit. The Research and
Development Facility team was given a picture of a similar unit
and its description, worked with Professor Kerry Dooley to reduce
the scale, then built a unit to suit the specific needs of the Chemical
Engineering Undergraduate Lab.
Perhaps the most important and challenging role that the Research
and Development Facility has played in recent years has been in
assisting the rest of the Chemical Engineering Department in improving
the Undergraduate Lab. Over $3 million in funding has gone into
making improvements to the Undergraduate Lab and hence to undergraduate
education in general. Dr. Dooley and Dr. Carl Knopf were extremely
instrumental in acquiring this funding. Asked how the Research and
Development Facility sees itself as helping to increase the quality
of undergraduate education, Rodriguez first points to overall facility
improvements. When he began his job twenty years ago, the facility
had one piece of heavy equipment: a manual milling machine. This
machine is still going strong, but beside it now sits a brand-spanking
new computerized milling machine, and a computerized lathe.
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| Frederick McKenzie |
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Rodriguez explains that computer-controlled machines aid in building
better teaching tools, such as the Polymerization Unit mentioned earlier.
The Research and Development Facility has built four major experiments
in the recent years, including the Yeast Experiment that involves
Dr. Martin Hjortsø’s fermentor.
Lab computers have also been upgraded and made to
interface with such experiments in last two years. Rodriguez credits
Dr. Dooley and Jeremy Landry, the department’s computer science
intern, with assisting the machine shop in this effort. All of these
improvements, including updating classrooms to include an overhead
projection system, have made undergraduate students very happy.
Computer Numeric Controlled (CNC) Shop
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| A mill was the
first piece of machinery in the CNC Shop. |
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An important part of the Research and Development Facility is a
Computer Numeric Controlled (CNC) Shop. The CNC Shop is free of
the grinding particulates generated by many types of tools. Machines
in the CNC Shop are sensitive and must be free of such particulates
in order to function properly.
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| Joe Bell in
the CNC shop |
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According to Chairman Carl Knopf and the Research and Development
Facility Manager Paul Rodriguez, the Department of Chemical Engineering
is fortunate to have such a facility. Most universities do not have
CNC Shops, and they are key in the production of high-grade research
equipment.
The CNC Shop is housed in the old chemical engineering building
and includes a computer-controlled lathe and mill.
This page was last modified on January 28, 2004 |