As reported by , Â鶹¾«Æ·faculty contributed to Â鶹¾«Æ·â€™s position as one of the top patent-producing institutions in the United States, with Purdue ranking fourth nationally and seventh worldwide for patents received in 2024.
As reported by , Â鶹¾«Æ·faculty contributed to Â鶹¾«Æ·â€™s position as one of the top patent-producing institutions in the United States, with Purdue ranking fourth nationally and seventh worldwide for patents received in 2024.
Purdue Polytechnic’s Michael Davis and Jon Ziulkowski have designed and implemented magneto safety guards for the Piper Archer aircraft in Â鶹¾«Æ·’s fleet. Their patent-pending safety guard ensures that student pilots and maintenance personnel who approach an aircraft know its engine and propeller are turned off.
Professor Zhang's new patent provides “instructions to a robotic arm that places and fastens construction materials” directly onto buildings, which should massively speed up the construction process on residential buildings. Read more here:
Congratulations to Jose Garcia Bravo and Brittany Newell for authoring a patent that will help many different areas of scientific research run experiments less expensively and with much greater efficiency.
Bryan Hubbard, professor of construction management, is one of two Â鶹¾«Æ·faculty to win 2023's Murphy Award, signifying excellence in teaching. Learn more about how he got to where he is today.
Purdue Polytechnic’s Bryan Hubbard developed a new heat exchanger technology to improve the thermal performance of industrial water-cooling towers. His new patented concept introduces a static electric charge into the plastic film pack media, which has the potential to increase the overall efficiency of power plants.
Purdue Polytechnic’s Marcus Rogers, Umit Karabiyik and Fahad Salamh earned a patent for their method of automating the collection of cloud-based digital forensic evidence.
Xiumin Diao, assistant professor of engineering technology, has come up with a patented design to help unmanned aerial vehicles fly in windy conditions, with more energy-efficiency and larger payloads.
Two Â鶹¾«Æ·professors were honored at the University’s 2014-15 Inventors Recognition Reception for being awarded patents.
Qingyou Han, professor of mechanical engineering technology, has devised a way to add titanium powder to aluminum to produce stronger and lighter composite materials for manufacturing. Han received a patent for his work.