Posts Categorized: News

Professor Susan McCahan receives the 2019 SWAAC Angela Hildyard Recognition Award (U of T Engineering News)


MIE alum Alex Hong (MASc 1T6) named one of Canada’s top developers under 30 (Betakit)


Creating microrobots using 3D printers: Research from Professor Eric Diller’s lab published in Science Robotics

MASc student Tianqi Xu holds up a microrobot that was fabricated using their automated system. (Photo credit: Liz Do)

April 26, 2019 – Graduate student Tianqi Xu (MIE MASc candidate) and his labmates, under the supervision of Professor Eric Diller, have developed a fast, precise way to assemble microrobots using a 3D printer. The process normally takes hours to manually assemble the millimetre-scale bots. With this new approach, it would only take 20 minutes.

These tiny robots are programmed and controlled wirelessly using magnetic fields. They could potentially be used in medical applications such as being swallowed and entering the gastrointestinal tract to take samples. “There’s a need to explore this space of tiny medical robots,” says Diller.

The team’s findings were recently published in Science Robotics, featured in a U of T Engineering news story and in a Science Magazine article and video (below). Diller was also interviewed in a video about this research on the popular Youtube channel Veritasium (below).

-by Pam Walls, pam@mie.utoronto.ca


Undergraduate students Kyle Bimm (MechE 1T9), Ana Medinac (IndE 1T8 +PEY) and Rohit Zachariah (IndE 1T8 + PEY) win 2019 Gordon Cressy Student Leadership Awards (U of T Engineering News)


Professors Goldie Nejat and Mark Fox present at CRAM, a one-night festival of ideas (U of T News)


MIE PhD candidate Arturo Reza Ugalde featured in story about U of T students from Mexico (U of T News)


Amphibious Landing Gear, a 3D Printer Kit and more student projects showcased at MIE Capstone event

Team members Yakun Zhao, Jingcheng Shan, Hengsheng Yang and Ruihe Zhang stand in front of their prototype of an air supply system that regulates the atmosphere inside high speed trains.

April 12, 2019 – There was a buzz in the room as students set up their prototypes and posters for one of their final projects as undergraduates in the Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering (MIE) at the University of Toronto. The annual showcase – which took place on April 3 – is the culmination of the fourth-year undergraduate Capstone design course.

The Capstone program is coordinated by professors Dionne Aleman and Kamran Behdinan. Professor Aleman oversees the industrial engineering MIE 490 course while Professor Behdinan heads the mechanical engineering MIE 491 course. At the beginning of the school year, student teams are paired with industry clients to address their real-world challenges. This year’s clients included Air Canada, Mozilla and World Vision among many others (see the full list of clients at the back of this year’s Capstone booklet).

Impressive prototypes were on display in the ballroom at 89 Chestnut, the venue for this year’s showcase. A group of students stood around a silicone drop-on-demand 3D printer kit watching it oscillate back and forth, the creation of students Yining Wang, Ruojing Song, Changsong Yang and Kangwei Wu for their client Advanced Research Laboratory for Multifunctional Lightweight Structures.

Students Yining Wang, Ruojing Song, Changsong Yang and Kangwei Wu examine their prototype of a silicone 3D printer add-on kit.

A loud, whirring sound could be heard throughout the day, the source of which was a pump inflating an attachable bladder for solar power aircraft, allowing the airships to touch down on both land and water. The amphibious landing gear was designed by students Amier Faudzi, Christine Bui, Romaissa Allalou and Sabrina Lokman for their client Solar Ship Inc. This project would go on to win the John H. Weber Scholarship which recognizes the top automotive or aviation design (see the full list of winners below).

Students Christine Bui, Romaissa Allalou, Sabrina Lokman and Amier Faudzi, inflate their attachable bladder that makes solar ships amphibious.

In the evening, Professor and Chair of MIE Markus Bussmann took to the stage to address the room full of students, some of whom Professor Bussmann supervised for their Capstone projects. “To the students here today,” said Professor Bussmann, “I congratulate you on the great work you have done. You should be very proud of what you have accomplished.”

Professor Behdinan then presented the awards for the top projects, as decided by two different rounds of judging conducted by MIE faculty members. Franca Peri presented the Peri Family Industrial Engineering Design Award to the first place industrial engineering team. Before presenting the award, she shared stories she has heard many times from her husband John Peri – who was unable to attend this year’s event – about his time as an industrial engineering student at U of T. She wished the students success in their professional and personal lives, noting that the best man at her and John’s wedding was a friend John made in the engineering program.

The camaraderie was palpable throughout the event, as students cheered and clapped when the winning teams were announced. After the awards ceremony, at the end of a very long day, the students packed up their projects and left looking tired, but laughter and chatter could still be heard as they slowly trickled out of the room.

-by Pam Walls, pam@mie.utoronto.ca


Watch a video from the MIE Capstone Showcase:


View photos from the Capstone 2018-19 Design Showcase in the gallery below or on the MIE Flickr page.


Winners of Capstone 2018-19 awards

1st place, Mechanical Engineering

Coconut Lathe: Efficient Paring in Rural Philippines

Team members: Hema Nookala, Maria Reuben, Aldrin Perez, Chuzhang Han

Supervisor: Amy Bilton

Client: CocoAsenso


2nd place, Mechanical Engineering

A Portable, Buildable Mechanical Testing Machine for Undergraduates

Team Members: Monica Burgers, Xinyue Liu, Simo Pajovic, Chi Zhang

Supervisor: Beno Benhabib

Client: Professor Jason Foster


3rd place, Mechanical Engineering

Designing a Solar Dehydrator for Cricket Consumption in Siem Reap, Cambodia

Team Members: Jeremy Miranda, Manjot Atwal, Michael Bento, Rachel Mandel

Supervisor: Amy Bilton

Client: World Vision


John H. Weber Scholarship

Design of Amphibious Landing Gear for Solar Powered Aircraft

Team Members: Amier Faudzi, Christine Bui, Romaissa Allalou, Sabrina Lokman

Supervisor: Olivera Kesler

Client: Solar Ship Inc.


1st place, Industrial Engineering and recipient of Peri Family Industrial Engineering Design Award

Web Compat User Feedback Decoder

Team Members: Bing Ning (Emily) Xu, Nicole Wongsoo, Carol Yeung, Amrit Prasad

Supervisor: Scott Sanner

Client: Mozilla Corporation


2nd place, Industrial Engineering

From Data to Dial: Driving Sales through the Force of Analytics

Team Members: Lu Chen, Alison Chow, Connor Lawless, Ana Medinac

Supervisor: Timothy Chan

Client: Salesforce


3rd place, Industrial Engineering

Air Canada: Predicting Flight Crew Absences

Team Members: Mark Charanduk, Kevin Xu, Youngmo Byun, Saurabh Agrawal

Supervisor: Merve Bodur

Client: Air Canada


Wallace G. Chalmers Scholarship

Ultraviolet Sanitizer for Portable Devices

Team Members: Chan Ho Lee, Po Ting Chou, Heechan Kang, Donghoon Kim, Putthipat Preecharwongsiri

Supervisor: Lidan You

Client: Confidential


View all 2018-19 Capstone design projects


Professor Emeritus Andrew K.S. Jardine named a Fellow of the Engineering Institute of Canada. Photo by Mitch Lenet. (U of T Engineering News)


Industrial Engineering student Deniz Nalbantoglu featured in story about international students at U of T (U of T Engineering News)


Mechanical engineering undergraduate students Tayyeb Zarabi, Jonathan Jeyarajah and Kyle Bimm featured in story about U of T Engineering’s Multidisciplinary Design Showcase. (U of T Engineering News)


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