News

  • Amid coronavirus crisis, look to ISO
    4/7/20

    Work instructions are an integral aspect for any business adhering to an ISO (International Organization for Standardization) standard. Yet we are dealing with a pandemic that has upended life, with no detailed work instructions to pull our businesses through such harrowing times. The UB Center for Industrial Effectiveness (UB TCIE) looks to the rigor of ISO for some guidance.

  • Kemper Lewis named dean of UB School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
    4/1/20

    A UB faculty member since 1996, Lewis has steadily risen through the ranks of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.

  • U.S. News ranks UB’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences No. 2 in the Northeast
    3/31/20

    The University at Buffalo School of Engineering and Applied Sciences is ranked second on the list of top public engineering schools in the northeast, according to U.S. News and World Report. Among public engineering schools, the school is ranked No. 33.

  • Local distillery with UB connection turning spirits into sanitizer
    3/31/20

    A micro-distillery on the Niagara Wine Trail co-owned by a UB staff member and a UB alumnus is helping Western New Yorkers stay healthy by turning spirits into hand sanitizer.

  • Online in a hurry
    3/23/20

    UB faculty quickly shift gears to be ready to finish the spring semester remotely.

  • What is 5G?
    2/28/20

    WIVB-TV reports on how 5G wireless technology promises to make computing and information sharing much faster. The station interviewed Filippo Malandra, assistant professor of research in UB’s Department of Electrical Engineering, who said 5G transmissions are over a shorter distance and narrowly focused, which is more advantageous in cities than in rural areas.

  • Changing policy with continuous improvement tools
    2/24/20

    Dianne Notaro works to give UB School of Dental Medicine patients a voice and ensure they receive the best care. Quality improvement skills are a must, and she is boosting hers with the aid of TCIE’s professional education. Expanding her repertoire is paying off: by leveraging course learnings, she is influencing policy changes. 

  • The next low-carbon energy source? It might be trash
    2/18/20

    Energy & Environment News reports that climate change is intensifying interest in the waste-to-energy industry. The story quotes John Atkinson, assistant professor in UB’s Department of Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering, who said the ultimate goal should be to produce less trash. But until that happens, turning waste into low- or zero-carbon electricity is an idea worth pursuing, he said.

  • Insect equipment could inspire heat-radiating tech
    2/18/20

    An article in Scientific American about how research on the cooling mechanisms of insects such as butterflies could inspire new materials, especially in light of climate change, quotes Qiaoqiang Gan, associate professor of electrical engineering, who said white isn’t the only way to go with such materials.

  • 3-D printing brings medical marvels to life
    2/16/20

    The Villages Daily Sun published a story on the potential of 3-D printing and quoted Ciprian Ionita, assistant professor of biomedical engineering and neurosurgery in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. Ionita discussed how he develops 3D models of the brain that surgeons then use to test how they will approach a complicated patient.