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Researcher
- Andrzej Nycz
- Chris Masuo
- Peter Wang
- Alex Walters
- Brian Gibson
- Joshua Vaughan
- Luke Meyer
- Tomonori Saito
- Udaya C Kalluri
- William Carter
- Akash Jag Prasad
- Alexei P Sokolov
- Amit Shyam
- Calen Kimmell
- Chelo Chavez
- Christopher Fancher
- Chris Tyler
- Clay Leach
- Diana E Hun
- Easwaran Krishnan
- Gordon Robertson
- J.R. R Matheson
- James Manley
- Jamieson Brechtl
- Jaydeep Karandikar
- Jay Reynolds
- Jeff Brookins
- Jesse Heineman
- Joe Rendall
- John Potter
- Karen Cortes Guzman
- Kashif Nawaz
- Kuma Sumathipala
- Mengjia Tang
- Muneeshwaran Murugan
- Riley Wallace
- Ritin Mathews
- Shannon M Mahurin
- Tao Hong
- Vincent Paquit
- Vladimir Orlyanchik
- Xiaohan Yang
- Zoriana Demchuk

System and method for part porosity monitoring of additively manufactured components using machining
In additive manufacturing, choice of process parameters for a given material and geometry can result in porosities in the build volume, which can result in scrap.

The lack of real-time insights into how materials evolve during laser powder bed fusion has limited the adoption by inhibiting part qualification. The developed approach provides key data needed to fabricate born qualified parts.

Estimates based on the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) test procedure for water heaters indicate that the equivalent of 350 billion kWh worth of hot water is discarded annually through drains, and a large portion of this energy is, in fact, recoverable.

We present the design, assembly and demonstration of functionality for a new custom integrated robotics-based automated soil sampling technology as part of a larger vision for future edge computing- and AI- enabled bioenergy field monitoring and management technologies called

Creating a framework (method) for bots (agents) to autonomously, in real time, dynamically divide and execute a complex manufacturing (or any suitable) task in a collaborative, parallel-sequential way without required human interaction.

The incorporation of low embodied carbon building materials in the enclosure is increasing the fuel load for fire, increasing the demand for fire/flame retardants.

Materials produced via additive manufacturing, or 3D printing, can experience significant residual stress, distortion and cracking, negatively impacting the manufacturing process.

In additive printing that utilizes multiple robotic agents to build, each agent, or “arm”, is currently limited to a prescribed path determined by the user.

This invention discusses the methodology to calibrating a multi-robot system with an arbitrary number of agents to obtain single coordinate frame with high accuracy.