Ƶ

Research | Queen’s University Canada

Custom Search Form

    Search Type

    Smith Engineering

    July 9, 2018

    Understanding how materials used in a range of engineering and manufacturing processes deform under stress and temperature fluctuations: the research helps scientists develop new materials and helps engineers better utilize these materials in their designs.

    July 9, 2018

    Investigating sustainable wastewater treatment strategies that have the potential for downstream recovery of biofuels: this research will lead to better bioresource management and contribute to a new generation of technologies for treating waste, residuals, and biomass feedstocks.

    [Photo of Praveen Jain and Marko Krstic at the ePOWER lab at Ƶ.]
    September 1, 2017

    Dr. Praveen Jain, Canada Research Chair in Power Electronics and head of ePOWER, is leading a team of researchers who are developing new technology to capture solar energy that “will enable us to have off-grid energy systems that are reliable and can give you a 24/7 supply of energy.”

    [Alice Vibert Douglas and colleagues at Yerkes Observatory, Chicago, 1925 (Ƶ University Archives)]
    October 1, 2016

    One of the oldest universities in Canada, research at Ƶ has left an indelible mark on the Canadian, and international, landscape of scholarly progress.

    Dr. Heather Jamieson samples soil near the Giant Mine in Yellowknife]
    October 1, 2016

    Queen’s made significant and successful efforts to attract women researchers to campus through the 1980s, including through such programs as the Queen’s National Scholar Program.

    [welding image]
    October 1, 2016

    When it comes to commercializing research, Queen’s has long been a leader among Canadian universities with the establishment of Innovation Park and the Office of Partnerships and Innovation.

    [illustration by Carl Wiens]
    April 1, 2016

    Science journalist Ivan Semeniuk retraces the history of Canada’s Nobel Prize-winning physics experiment led by Queen's researcher Arthur McDonald.

    [ Dr. Ugo Piomelli smiling ]
    April 1, 2015

    Queen's researcher Dr. Ugo Piomelli, Canada Research Chair in Turbulence Simulation and Modelling, discusses the relationship between turbulent flow and the surfaces it interacts with as part of his research at the Turbulence Simulation Lab (TSL) at Queen's.

    Pages

    Subscribe to Smith Engineering