Atomic-level scrutiny: Chemist takes unprecedented look at interactions

Posted by | Posted on 23-06-2011

PULLMAN, Wash.If youre looking for a reason to be nervous about flying, consider that much of your airplane is probably held together by glue.   Most modern aircraft are glued together, said Kerry Hipps, a Washington State University professor and chair of chemistry and materials science. The rivets you see are just to control peeling; the adhesive provides the strength. A very thin interaction between one metal, the adhesive, and the next metal keeps the whole plane in the air.   Heres another reason to be nervous: Science isnt quite sure what those surfaces are doing when their atoms and molecules are, for lack of a more scientific term, shaking hands.   Obviously, things are working pretty well. But Hipps wants to know how theyre working, and hes going to watch them in unprecedented ways.   There are a lot of processes that go on at the surface that are important to technology that weve never really looked at closely, he said. And by closely I mean literally watch the atoms and molecules do their thing. Thats what we want to do.   Hipps has received a three-year National Science Foundation grant of $483,000 for a molecular-level look at the way liquids and solids interact. The research has implications for a growing number of technologies, from adhesives to chemical sensors, as well as the emerging science of the super-small, nanotechnology.   Hipps main tool is a scanning tunneling microscope, a 30-year-old Nobel Prize-winning innovation that can see materials as small as a millionth of a millimeter.   He concentrates on the interface between a surface and a liquid. Thats because one liquid will generally dissolve another, and two solids usually just bump together, sharing just a few layers of atoms.   But the atoms of liquids and solids get on like friendly Rotarians, facilitating natural processes – like a red blood cells delivery of oxygen – and technologies – like sensors, sticky notes, catalytic converters and laminates.   The scanning tunneling microscope came into wide use in the mid-1980s and since has helped spawn more than 20,000 research papers. But fewer than 800 looked at the interactions of solids and liquids, Hipps said.   Of those, only a handful of papers involve research above or below room temperature, even though temperature dramatically affects the rate and mechanics of a reaction - and whether it occurs at all.   If we can understand how fast reactions occur and at what temperatures, we can begin to design new types of materials that use both features in making new surfaces and products, said Hipps.   For now, he said, scientists and engineers approach these technologies by trial and error, which can involve hundreds of experiments. But a deeper understanding of molecular interactions and processes can markedly reduce the number of experiments needed to get a desired result, Hipps said.   Such an understanding will lead to technologies that use less energy, create less pollution and use materials more efficiently.   Energy is expensive and were trying to minimize the energy, Hipps said. Were trying to do things in a green way.

Taylor takes over at Springfield

Posted by | Posted on 23-06-2011

SPRINGFIELD — Adam Taylor has been hired as the new head football coach at Springfield High School.

He was approved at Thursday’s school board meeting.

“We’re very excited,” said Springfield High communications consultant Kim Fish. “I understand he impressed the interview committee. He’s got coaching experience at the middle school and high school level in three different sports. We’re looking forward to him starting with our players.”

Taylor, who will also be teaching in the district, was an assistant coach at Springfield in 2009 and served as the head varsity coach at Greeneview High School from 2006 through 2008, where he went 5-25.

He takes over for Rick Robertson, who led the Wildcats to back-to-back Division I, Region 3 playoff berths and a share of the Greater Western Ohio Conference Central Division championship last fall.

He resigned on April 14 to take the vacant job at Oakwood.

So is Taylor ready for a challenge?

“I love them,” said Taylor of challenges, with a slight chuckle. “I don’t think this is a bad situation. It’s a good situation we’re in.”

Why?

“I coached there in ’09 and we had a great situation,” he said. “Of all the kids I’ve coached with, the kids of Springfield were the ones who most craved quality coaching. For me, it was a refreshing and exciting experience, to have them hungry for that.”

Taylor did not coach football last season for logistical reasons.

“I did take the year off,” he said. “Driving to practice from where I was teaching at (in the Sidney district) was draining. I wasn’t able to be there at the beginning of practice and it bothered me.

“I felt like I wasn’t able to be there for everything from the start. I was going 150 miles a day from home to where I taught to coaching and then back home.

“This drive will be much shorter.”

Taylor has yet to receive his specific assignment for the fall, but that didn’t matter to him.

“Teaching and coaching in the same district is something I’ve been looking forward to for a long time,” he said.

Taylor will have approximately five weeks to put a coaching staff together and prepare his team before summer two-a-day practices officially begin on Aug. 1.

“First things first, and that is getting together with the players
in the program and the coaches who have been holding it all together,” he said. “I know Coach (Conley) Smoot from before, and I’m very happy with what he has done with them so far. He is a quality coach, and quality person.”

Smoot, a 2002 South High grad and assistant coach, was running offseason workouts during the selection process.

“It will be harder as far as getting everybody on the same page, offensively and defensively, and establishing team philosophies,” Taylor admitted. “Those are things that most coaches can rely on building on coming into the summer.

“We’ll need to hit the ground running this week.”

But he thinks he and the team can catch up quickly.

“I have worked with many of these young men in the past,” he said. “I know what they are capable of and have a lot of confidence in them.

“Another challenge I’m going to have is building a coaching staff. Most guys are committed (to coaching jobs) already. But I have already been contacted by several quality individuals and I like the way things are looking.

“That’ll be at the top of my list, building a quality coaching staff,” he continued. “That’s very important, and it’s something we stressed during the interview process. We need to make sure we get the best role models we possibly can to teach these young men.”

Springfield’s Week 1 opponent is powerhouse Cincinnati St. Xavier. The game will be regionally televised on FSN Ohio as part of the Skyline Chili Crosstown Showdown at Nippert Stadium at 8:15 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 27.

The next week, the ’Cats will play its Week 2 opponent, Upper Arlington, at Ohio Stadium at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 4, as part of the 2011 Kirk Herbstreit National Kickoff Classic. The game will be nationally televised on ESPNU.

So Taylor is anxious to get started, and has planned a team meeting for Monday.

“I’ve been anxiously awaiting word from Dr. (David) Estrop and the school,” he said. “I am ready to roll. I’ve been anticipating it and planning for it.

“I look forward to working with them and have nothing but confidence in what we’ll be able to accomplish in 2011.”

Contact Cooper at (937) 328-0365, mcooper@coxohio.com or on Twitter @SNS_Wizard or Rowe at 328-0364 or krowe@coxohio.com.

Coach continued on B4

US Kodu Cup Winners Announced (2011)

Posted by | Posted on 23-06-2011

Yesterday the Unlimited Potential team announced the winners of the inaugural US Kodu Cup competition.

There were some surprises in the entries – namely that students found things to do and ways to use the tool that the people who created it had never thought about. And of course there was amazing creativity and a lot of hard work in evidence. That makes the results even more exciting to me. I love the themes of the winning entries as well. The entry by Hannah Wyman 10 years old, from Massachusetts, had a theme around saving the environment by planting trees and getting soot out of the air. A very creative game for sure. You can see her video below but visit the Unlimited Potential blog post to see more of them.

More information on Kodu and STEM education

  • Kodu game lab site
  • Kodu Cup web site
  • Blog: Making games can contribute to learning
  • Blog: Can kids love math and science more than ice cream?
  • STEM whitepaper (PDF)

 

Bond between 100 Black Men, Calhoun Community College ‘natural fit’

Posted by | Posted on 23-06-2011

“You can almost stumble on a great idea and wondered why you haven’t done it much earlier,” Beck said.

Better late than never, Calhoun and 100 Black Men of Huntsville have formed a partnership that both sides described as a “natural fit.”

The 100 Black Men program is “Men of Tomorrow,” which has about 45 African-American males ages 8 to 18 in a year-long program “that provides them with life-skills training,” said Kenneth Anderson, vice president for development for the 100 Black Men of Huntsville.

The 100 Black Men plan to meet at Calhoun’s Huntsville campus on the second and fourth Saturdays each month, beginning July 9.

“We realized this was a good opportunity to bring two organizations together who are making a difference in the lives of people through education,” said Anderson, who is also dean of humanities and social sciences at Calhoun.

The idea was hatched after 100 Black Men of Huntsville held a breakfast for community leaders.

“We presented to them the idea that we were here, we were trying to make a difference,” Anderson said. “We felt our best work could be done not in isolation of the community but by joining hands with forces in the community with shared goals and shared visions.”

Beck was among the community leaders who attended the breakfast and quickly became a fan of the work the 100 Black Men group was doing. An added benefit was that the group was seeking a new home for their Saturday mentoring program and Beck offered Calhoun cost-free.

“It turned out to be an uplifting, inspirational meeting with a group of people who are just doing great work in our community,” Beck said.

Educational opportunities are available for the parents of the young men on those Saturday mornings at Calhoun as well.

“This is going to give them a tremendous opportunity to be located on a college campus and be exposed to things that they routinely would not be exposed to at this age,” Anderson said.

Said Beck, “It is a natural fit. It truly is. We have not been as successful getting black men into college. We have not been as successful as we should have been. This is really a positive effort.”