June 28, 2023 UMD Home FabLab AIMLab



Herbert Rabin Distinguished Professor Reza Ghodssi (ECE/ISR/UMERC/NanoCenter) has received a new three-year, $330,000 grant from the National Science Foundation for research on microball bearing systems with an emphasis on material interfaces for MicroElectroMechanical Systems (MEMS) applications. Ghodssi is the principal investigator (PI) for the research project, titled "Tribologically-Enhanced Encapsulated Microball Bearings for Reduced Friction and Wear in High-Performance Rotary Microactuators and PowerMEMS Devices."

Dr. Matthew McCarthy, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute for Technology (MIT), is Co-PI. McCarthy previously served as a postdoctoral associate in Ghodssi's research group at the University of Maryland.

The objective of this work is to develop high-performance rotary ball bearings for MEMS using special, tribologically-enhanced thin-film coatings. Particular emphasis will be on the design, fabrication, and experimental characterization of the thin films as hard-coatings to reduce friction and wear in microscale rolling contacts. The results of this will be implemented in a low-friction, low-wear, and long-lifecycle microball bearing for rotary microactuators and PowerMEMS devices.

Ghodssi's team is currently conducting research on the development of compact micro-turbogenerators for small-scale cost-effective power generation and rotary actuator platforms for directional sensor systems. The reliable demonstration of such devices over long life-cycles may have a substantial impact on distributed autonomous systems such as micro-air-vehicles, portable power systems, and sensor networks.

For more information, visit the NSF website.



June 17, 2009


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Selected Publications from NanoCenter's AIM Lab and FabLab

Connect with Maryland Engineering at the 2023 ASEE Annual Conference

Powering a Greener Future

Device That Harvests Water From Air Named Top UMD Invention of the Year

Maryland Engineering Graduate Programs: Top 10 Among Public Universities, Five Years in a Row

Electrified Plastic Recycling Toward A Sustainable Future

Crank Up the AC, Not Global Warming

Women’s History Month Spotlight

Safe Lithium Batteries Get a Boost

2023 Energy Seed Grants Provide Launchpad for Local Startups

 

Colleges A. James Clark School of Engineering
The College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences

Communicate Join Email List
Contact Us
Follow us on TwitterTwitter logo

Links Privacy Policy
Sitemap
RSS

Copyright The University of Maryland University of Maryland
2004-2023