
Case School of Engineering
From cutting-edge robotics and biomedical advances to breakthroughs in data science, sustainable energy and artificial intelligence, our students, faculty, staff and alumni are forging the future. Stay up to date with the latest stories from that showcase how we solve real-world problems with creativity and precision.

Hero Type
Image
Meet a researcher extracting the elements that could change everything
Associate Professor, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Case School of Engineering Member, Cancer Imaging Program, Case Comprehensive Cancer Center Area of Focus: Developing advanced materials and processes to separate f-elements (lanthanides and actinides) with applications…
In the News
Recent News
May 17, 2013
Jing Li, associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, recently gave a keynote speech at Great Lakes Bioinformatics Conference (GLBIO), which was held May 14-16 on the Carnegie Mellon campus, co-hosted by Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsb...
May 06, 2013
A team of ϳԹ students is pushing Jell-O as brain food—to teach middle schoolers about engineering.
For their efforts, the team won the Biomaterials Education Challenge and $2,500 prize at the Society of Biomaterials’ national meeting in April.
Jell-O may be the nation’...
May 06, 2013
Fourth-year engineering student Alan Filer has won a Fulbright scholarship to travel to South Korea in the fall. There, he’ll explore ways to make cheaper and cleaner alternatives to costly and toxic materials used in solar panels.
Filer, who will graduate with a bachelor’s degree in materials scie...
April 30, 2013
Tina He, a PhD student in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) mentored by Professor Philip Feng, won the Best Student Paper competition at the 8th Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) International Conference on Nano/Micro Engineered & Molecular S...
April 09, 2013
Led by scientists at ϳԹ, researchers have turned to an unlikely model to make medical devices safer and more comfortable: a squid’s beak.
Many medical implants require hard materials that have to connect to or pass through soft body tissue. This mechanical mismatch lead...
April 07, 2013
Vaccinations are critical to good health, but to be effective, the vaccines must be refrigerated. In developing countries with little access to electricity to keep the vaccines cold or automobiles to quickly transport them, simply getting vaccines to individuals in need can be a major challenge. Tha...
March 21, 2013
Return to Think By Numbers, the 2012-2013 Annual Report
ϳԹ and partners have won funding to develop new ways to repair and alter costly manufacturing tools using three-dimensional printing technology.
In addition, Carnegie Mellon University and ϳԹ are...
March 17, 2013
A new method of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) could provide early identification of specific cancers, multiple sclerosis, heart disease and other maladies, researchers at ϳԹ and University Hospitals (UH) Case Medical Center write in the journal Nature.
Each body tiss...
March 12, 2013
ϳԹ’s health law program leapt to fifth in the nation and pediatrics climbed to 14th in U.S. News & World Report’s annual graduate and professional school rankings released Tuesday. Those gains, coupled with a seven-point jump, to 30th, for the Weatherhead School of Management’s Par...
February 28, 2013
ϳԹ’s School of Engineering has launched three new master’s degree programs that respond to shifts in industry and workforce demand.
The advanced degrees are aimed at professionals and recent graduates who seek specific training in wireless health, fire science and engin...