This year, we’re celebrating graduating class years ending in 0, 1, 5, or 6. We look forward to seeing you online!
Upcoming events:
Wednesday, May 26, 2021
Skule™ Kick Off
6:00 – 6:45 p.m.
Let’s get loud! We are, we are, we are, we are, we are the engineers! Join fellow Skulemates and get in the spirit as we kick off Alumni Reunion activities. This fun- filled program will include special guest appearances from the LGMB, Cannon and many more!
Department Socials
6:45 – 8:00 p.m.
Join us following the SkuleTM Kick Off for Department Socials on Gather.Town and find out what’s happening in your home department. This virtual platform mimics networking like the good ol’ days!
Friday, May 28, 2021
Alumni SUDS
7:00 – 8:30 p.m.
Sip, Sip, Horray! It may not be the Brunswick House or Einstein’s, but it’s the next best thing!! Join us for a virtual beer tasting with alumni-founded Rorschach Brewery! Join Skulemates Matt Reiner(ChemE 1T0) and Mohan Pandit (ChemE 1T0, MD 1T4) as they guide us through four beers they developed right down the street from St. George Campus! Enhance your tasting experience by purchasing a beer tasting kit (includes four beers and limited-edition tasting glasses) directly through the Rorschach Brewery website.
Register by May 11th to secure your spot at a virtual table with your friends and classmates.
Saturday, May 29, 2021
Breakfast with the Dean
9:00 – 10:00 a.m.
From the comfort of your kitchen, bake alongside the Dean Chris Yip as he whips up breakfast to help you get the weekend off to a healthy start. It’s fun for the whole family! This is a great opportunity to ask questions and hear Dean Yip’s insights for the year ahead.
Dean Yip will share insights on Fall planning and the direction and bright future of our Faculty.
Register and learn more about the 2021 Alumni Reunion events!
The Department of Chemical Engineering & Applied Chemistry is excited to host the 4th annual ChemE Graduate Research Exhibition.
This virtual poster exhibition features cutting edge graduate research in Energy, Environment, and Health presented in the unique and interactive Gather.town platform where you will have the opportunity to interact directly with students, alumni, faculty, and staff and to learn more about the incredible research taking place throughout the Department.
Register: https://forms.office.com/r/He4Mr0hZ0g
Link and instructions will be email prior to the event.
Presented by Trinity Centre for Biomedical Engineering & University of Toronto
Featuring:
Caroline Curtin, Assistant Professor, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Biomaterial Scaffolds as Gene Activated Platforms for Tissue Engineering & 3D Tumour Models for Cancer Research
Warren Chan, Professor, University of Toronto
A Framework to Engineer Nanoparticle Delivery Systems for In Vivo Targeting
David Hoey, Associate Professor, Trinity College Dublin
Mechano-biologically Inspired Therapeutics and Materials for Bone Regeneration
Penney Gilbert, Associate Professor, University of Toronto
3D Human Skeletal Muscle Microtissues to Assess Function in a Dish
Michael Monaghan, Assistant Professor, Trinity College Dublin Electroconductive Biomaterial Patches and Scaffolds to Match the Mechanical Anisotropy of Organ specific Tissues
Milica Radisic, Professor University of Toronto
Advances in Organ on a Chip Engineering
Hosted by Molly Shoichet and Michael Monaghan
Alán Aspuru-Guzik, Professor, Depts. of Chemistry and Computer Science, University of Toronto
In this colloquium level talk, I will overview my research group’s activities in the area of self-driving laboratories. These labs combine artificial intelligence, automation, and chemical experiments with the aim of reducing time-to-discovery. The applications that I will overview briefly will be in the area of generative AI models for drug discovery, self-driving laboratories for organic light-emitting and lasing materials, as well as the process optimization and scaleup processes for pharmaceuticals as concrete examples of what self-driving labs are all about. I will also discuss more futuristic areas of research which involve the development of computer vision systems for automated laboratories and robotic arms for carrying out complex chemical experiments in a more autonomous fashion.
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Alán Aspuru-Guzik is a professor of Chemistry and Computer Science at the University of Toronto and is also the Canada 150 Research Chair in Theoretical Chemistry and a Canada CIFAR AI Chair at the Vector Institute. He is a CIFAR Lebovic Fellow in the Biologically Inspired Solar Energy program. Alán also holds an Google Industrial Research Chair in Quantum Computing. Alán is the director of the Acceleration Consortium, a University of Toronto-based strategic initiative that aims to gather researchers from industry, government and academia around pre-competitive research topics related to the lab of the future.
CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES!
The University of Toronto will host a virtual ceremony to celebrate our graduates on:
Wednesday, June 23, 2021 at 12:00 p.m. ET
The University of Toronto is pleased to announce the date of our Spring 2021 virtual convocation ceremony. We understand the importance of celebrating your remarkable achievements and hard work in reaching this significant milestone, even at a time when our traditional convocation ceremonies are not possible because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In place of in-person ceremonies, the University is planning to host a virtual Convocation ceremony in which the Chancellor will officially confer degrees on members of the June 2021 graduating class. After the virtual ceremony, diplomas will be couriered (for free) to our graduates over the course of the following weeks. Please allow some flexibility with this schedule, particularly under these difficult circumstances.
Once the public health situation stabilizes and it is possible to gather safely again, individual academic divisions will be able to plan in-person graduation celebrations to honour our graduates, and their families and friends.
Save the date: the first ever Engineering Research Days: Empowering Innovation event is coming up on June 24 – 25, 2021!
You’re invited to join researchers and students from across U of T Engineering to showcase the leading work underway within the Faculty. Engineering Research Days is designed to create opportunities for collaboration and partnership with peers and industry partners. The program will feature:
- Interactive fireside chats with guest speakers
- Panels on emerging research trends and themes
- Poster sessions
- Networking opportunities
This year’s virtual event is open to all students, staff and faculty in U of T Engineering, as well as current and prospective industry partners and key stakeholders across the research ecosystem.
Additional program details, speaker announcements — you don’t want to miss it!
9:35 AM
Louise Moyle
Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Toronto
A mechanobiology-based approach to muscle stem cell repair
Olwyn Mahon
Postdoctoral Fellow, Trinity College Dublin | University Limerick
Interplay between immune cells and tissue specific microenvironmental components: Immunomodulatory scaffolds for tissue repair and regeneration
10:50 AM
Muhammad Rizwan
Research Associate, University of Toronto
Synthetic Notch activating hydrogel induces liver biliary cells differentiation and morphogenesis
Tom Hodgkinson
Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellow, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Osteochondral cell regeneration strategies through mechanobiology and biomaterial-controlled siRNA delivery
11:50 AM
Eimear Dolan
Royal Society-Science Foundation, Ireland (SFI) University Research Fellow National University of Ireland Galway
Dynamic devices to improve therapy delivery
Qinghua Wu
Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Toronto
High-throughput heart-on-achip platform for studies of SARS-CoV-2 induced myocardial injury
Increasing concern over fossil fuel use and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions has led to growing interest in the use of biomass (i.e., plant material and organic waste) for both energy and materials. Around the world, government programs primarily incentivize use of biofuels in the transportation sector. In contrast, few policy drivers exist to encourage the use of biomass for the production of chemicals, an industry which is currently among the largest users of fossil fuel and which is responsible for approximately 7% of global GHG emissions.
To guide efficient resource use, this talk explores certain tradeoffs in the use of biomass for GHG mitigation in a U.S./North American context. In particular, this research addresses key questions, such as 1) are greater GHG reductions achieved when using bio-ethanol as a transportation fuel, or as a chemical feedstock? 2) within the plastics sector, are greater GHG emission reductions achieved by switching to bio-based plastics, or more simply by producing conventional plastics with renewable energy? This talk will also discuss recent work showing 3) how economic/market response can substantially undermine or reverse the GHG benefits from biofuel policies. The results of these studies shed light on the uncertainty present in the life-cycle GHG emissions from bio-based products, and make concrete recommendations to set priorities in the use of biomass for GHG mitigation.
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Professor Daniel Posen is an Assistant Professor in Civil & Mineral Engineering at the University of Toronto. He holds a dual PhD in Engineering & Public Policy and Civil & Environmental Engineering (Carnegie Mellon University, 2016), a Master of Science in Economics (London School of Economics, 2012), a Master of Research in Green Chemistry (Imperial College London, 2010) and a BA in Chemistry (Princeton University, 2009). Dr. Posen’s research uses a mix of technical and economic modeling to supply quantitative, system-level analysis to support of environmental decision making. His expertise spans a range of areas including life cycle assessment and life cycle thinking; setting priorities for greenhouse gas mitigation; evaluating biofuels, bio-based materials & other uses for biomass; electric vehicles and transportation fuels; modeling of fossil fuel and energy markets; public policy & decision support models; and quantifying uncertainty and risk in environmental systems & environmental policy.
Zoom Meeting Details
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Meeting ID: 839 7592 7179
Passcode: 054682
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Dr. Chang Liu
Research Scientist,
SCIEX
We describe an innovative Acoustic Ejection Mass Spectrometry (AEMS) platform resulting from the novel integration of acoustic droplet ejection (ADE) technology, an open-port interface (OPI), and electrospray ionization (ESI) MS that creates a transformative system enabling high-speed sampling and label-free analysis. The ADE technology delivers nanoliter droplets in a touchless manner with high speed, precision and accuracy; subsequent sample dilution within the OPI, in concert with the capabilities of modern ESI-MS, eliminates the laborious sample preparation and method development required in current approaches. This AEMS platform is applied to a variety of workflows, including high-throughput (HT) pharmacology screening, label-free in situ enzyme kinetics, in vitro and in vivo adsorption, distribution, metabolism, elimination, pharmacokinetic (PK) and biomarker analysis, compound QC, HT parallel medicinal chemistry, and synthetic biology. The system principles and representative applications of AEMS technology will be discussed in this talk.
Dr. Chang Liu earned his B.Sc. in Chemistry from Peking University, China, and his Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from the University of British Columbia, Canada. Chang joined SCIEX in 2013 as a scientist where he has been working on the front-end sample preparation and sample introduction technologies, and their applications in high-throughput drug discovery. Dr. Liu has published more than 30 papers and was the organizer of the High-throughput MS session for Pittcon. He was the recipient of Danaher Excellence in Innovation Award, CSC Ryan-Harris Award, and ACS Analytical Chemistry Graduate Fellowship.
Hosted by Professor Krishna Mahadevan
The Centre for Research and Applications in Fluidic Technologies (CRAFT) will be hosting a second virtual symposium from August 25 to 27, 2021. This year’s CRAFT Virtual Symposium will showcase cutting-edge microfluidics research related to organ-on-chips, biofabrication and diagnostic devices and translating microfluidic technologies to clinics and industry.
The Symposium is geared towards researchers, trainees, clinicians and companies from across Canada and beyond working in the area of microfluidics and those wishing to learn more about it and get involved with it.
Highlights year’s Symposium will include:
- 3 international keynotes
- a poster hall with on-demand research presentations
- an industry exhibit hall with microfluidics companies and vendors
- a networking event with industry representatives, NRC researchers and more
- a Microfluidics Art Competition
- a fireside chat with a graduate student turned company founder and more!
Abstract and microfluidic art submission deadline: June 1, 2021.
More info at https://craftmicrofluidics.ca/news/craft-research-symposium/