Team of EE and CE faculty have won first place at 7th Annual Innovation Forum organized by the Princeton’s Keller Center for Innovation in Engineering Education. The technology for which they received this award are sensing sheets for high-resolution structural health monitoring over large structures. These nanotechnology sensing sheets which could be applied “like wallpaper” may one day provide high-resolution monitoring of large structures such as bridges or pipelines to reveal problem
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Prof. Gerard Wysocki and Postdoctoral Research Associate Michal Nikodem have been awarded second place in the 7th Innovation Forum organized by the Princeton’s Keller Center for Innovation in Engineering Education. The technology is based on Chirped Laser Dispersion Spectroscopy, or CLaDS, a method for increased speed and sensitivity in detection of potentially harmful industrial gas emissions and atmospheric greenhouse gases.

