Chemical engineering professor and chair Rachel Segalman has been elected an AIChE fellow.
College of Engineering News

Rachel Segalman, professor and chair of the Chemical Engineering Department
Sep 21, 2022

Electricity flowing through a metal coil generates electric (purple) and magnetic (faint green) fields. This changes the properties of the substrate, which tunes the resonance ring (red) to different frequencies. The whole setup enables the scientists to convert a continuous beam of light (red on left) into pulses that can carry data through a fiber-optic cable. Illustration by Brian Long
Sep 19, 2022
Researchers create a device to streamline interactions between ultra-cold and room-temperature computers.

The college highlights members of the Hispanic and Latinx communities who have made or are currently making remarkable contributions to engineering.
Sep 14, 2022
The college highlights members of the Hispanic and Latinx communities who have made or are currently making remarkable contributions to engineering.

Professor Beth Pruitt (back row, center) with the first PhD students in biological engineering (clockwise from top left): Zsofia Szegletes, Samuel Feinstein, Gianna Gathman, Lauren Washington, Shaylee Larson, and Elana Muzzy.
Sep 12, 2022
The inaugural cohort includes six PhD students, including five women.

The Class of 2022 celebrates at the conclusion of UC Santa Barbara's College of Engineering Undergraduate Commencement.
Sep 12, 2022
Four undergraduate programs within the College of Engineering rank in the top 15 among public institutions.

The DOE awarded a four-year, $12 million extension to The Center for Materials and Energy Systems (M-WET).
Sep 01, 2022
Department of Energy awards $12 million grant to collaboration involving researchers at three institutions, including UC Santa Barbara.

Students, faculty, and industry came together for the three-day event to exchange information and forge research collaborations.
Aug 12, 2022
The three-day symposium united students, faculty, and industry members to share their work and forge research collaborations.

Jessica Santana, technology management assistant professor
Jul 25, 2022
Funding supports data repository for the computational study of entrepreneurship

Art Gossard with the molecular beam epitaxy instrument he largely invented.
Jul 17, 2022
One of the true giants of materials science has died.

The start of the gradient line indicates the first chemical synthesis of the relevant material. The light bulb indicates the recognition of its importance. Laurels correspondence to the Nobel (top two are UCSB).
Jul 15, 2022
Professors emeritus Anthony K. Cheetham and Fred Wudl, with Ram Seshadri, explain why, however, its impact might not be seen for a decade or more.

Associate professor Alban Sauret (left) and first-year PhD student Ram Sharma with the experimental setup to test crater resulting from the dynamics of result cohesion, turbulence, erosion, and transport.
Jul 15, 2022
Alban Sauret's lab group seeks to quantify the relationship between cohesion and erosion.

Chris Van de Walle, distinguished professor of materials
Jul 14, 2022
The DoD’s flagship award will support new computational approaches to improve efficiency of devices.
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