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Research

Advanced materials

At UW Mechanical Engineering, next-generation materials drive innovations in areas such as advanced manufacturing, robotics, energy, health and medicine, and the environment.

With the ability to test material performance through simulations and build new materials on the micro- and nano-scale, it’s an exciting time to study advanced materials.

How ME is making an impact

Mechanical engineers in sustainability

ME researchers are using new 3D printing methods to develop energy devices, designing recyclable polymers with AI and more.

Harvesting thermal energy to power wearable electronics

Assistant Professor Mohammad Malakooti created a wearable thermoelectric device that converts body heat to electricity.

How academia can help battery manufacturing in the U.S.

Professor Jie Xiao discusses battery components and how academia can help support the growing domestic battery manufacturing industry.

New circuit boards can be repeatedly recycled

A team led by UW researchers, including ME Assistant Professor Aniruddh Vashisth, developed a printed circuit board that performs on par with traditional materials and can be recycled repeatedly.

Research centers and institutes

Advanced Composites Center

The Advanced Composites Center is building a robust innovation ecosystem for industry and academia to advance the field of data-driven methods for composites manufacturing.

Boeing Advanced Research Collaboration

Through the Boeing Advanced Research Collaboration, Boeing-employed affiliate instructors work in the lab side by side with faculty and students on joint research projects in the manufacturing and assembly of aircraft and spacecraft structures.

Clean Energy Institute

The Clean Energy Institute accelerates the adoption of a scalable and equitable clean energy future that will improve the health and economy of our state, nation and world.

Institute for Nano-Engineered Systems

The Institute for Nano-Engineered Systems (NanoES) accelerates the translation of nanoscale research into next-generation products for quantum information sciences, clean energy and medical diagnostics.

All research centers & institutes

Associated faculty

Faculty directory

Notable partners and sponsors

Blue Origin, Boeing, Meta, Microsoft, National Science Foundation, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy.

Application areas

Advanced manufacturing

ME is creating materials that are durable, versatile and sustainable to meet industry needs — such as stronger and lighter composites for aircraft — as well as testing materials to ensure their strength.

Biomedical science and technology

Researchers are developing devices to help improve disease diagnosis and treatment, as well as creating biomaterials to better understand human injury.

Energy

To enhance efficiencies and reduce environmental impacts, ME researchers are engineering batteries and solar cells, creating energy-harvesting materials and optimizing battery storage.

Environment

ME researchers are creating materials for renewable energy technologies, using materials to reduce noise pollution, developing reusable or recyclable plastics for electronics and more.

Robotics

ME is creating advanced materials, such as soft composites, that can enhance robots’ functionality.

Related News

Professor Corie L. Cobb

Mon, 01/24/2022 | UW Mechanical Engineering

Corie L. Cobb awarded DARPA Director's Fellowship

ME Professor Corie L. Cobb, the Washington Research Foundation Innovation Professor in Clean Energy, has been selected as recipient of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Director’s Fellowship Award.

In the background is some carbon fiber tape on a machine with text that says "composites - faster, smarter" on it and photos of five professors

Tue, 01/11/2022 | National Science Foundation

Composites: faster, smarter

A new NSF grant supports UW planning for an Industry-University Cooperative Research Center (IUCRC) on Data-driven High-rate Composites Manufacturing to partner with industry on high-performance, lightweight materials.

Headshots of Ayokunle Olanrewaju and Mehmet Kurt

Thu, 12/09/2021

Welcome new faculty

The ME department welcomes new faculty members for the 2021–2022 school year.

illustration of a 2x2 grid of squares with the left two squares dark grey and the light two squares light grey

Mon, 11/15/2021 | GeekWire

UW spinout aims to detect eye and body movement using sensors embedded in paper

Somalytics, a new startup spun out of research by ME Associate Professor Jae-Hyun Chung, has developed ultrathin, flexible sensors that are built from tiny carbon nanotubes embedded in paper that can detect eye and body movement.