Kansas Engineer - Fall 2021

Page 23

FACULTY NEWS

KU Engineering Professor Wins Prestigious Fellowship for Bridge Lifespan Research by Joel Mathis

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KU School of Engineering professor has received a prestigious national fellowship award for his research into new techniques to build steel decks for highway bridges. William Collins, an associate professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering, is the recipient of the 2021 Milek Fellowship award, from the American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC). “I’m very excited,” said Collins. “In terms of research, this award is the highest honor in the steel construction industry. In terms of prestige in my field, it’s a pretty big deal.” “It’s a prestigious achievement recognizing that he’s promising young university faculty and a rising star,” said Candan Tamerler, associate dean for research. “It’s great recognition.” Most highway bridges have decks — the part that cars and trucks actually drive on — made of concrete, which is relatively cheap. A few large bridges, like the Brooklyn Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge, have steel decks because they’re so long that engineers opt to use steel, which is a lighter material but often much more expensive. But “all concrete eventually cracks. That’s the nature of the material,” Collins said. That means a concrete deck must be repaired or replaced multiple times during the lifespan of a highway bridge. “Over the lifetime it can get expensive,” he said. Collins’ research focuses on making it cheaper to build steel decks for

William Collins

short- and medium-span bridges. The goal, he said, is to develop techniques to make prefabricated modular steel pieces, light enough to ship easily on the back of a tractor-trailer instead of being constructed in place. The end product would still be more expensive than concrete initially but could be cheaper over the multi-decade lifespan of the bridge because it would need replacing less often. “Maybe this can’t compete on cost on Day One, but 20, 30, 50 years down the road, when you’ve had to replace the concrete deck multiple times, this is potentially a competitive option,” Collins said. And that could save taxpayers money in the long run, Collins said. “I care about the thousands of small bridges around the country that we’re spending money for maintenance and upkeep. We are spending money

that we don’t necessarily need to, and those resources could be reallocated for other important infrastructure needs,” he said. Collins said he plans to use KU’s structural testing lab in his research: Fabricators will build full-sized deck panels using his techniques, then he and his students will test those panels to characterize strength and performance. “We have awesome lab facilities here at KU,” he said. “One of the best parts of this job is building big stuff and breaking it.” Collins said he had aimed at winning the Milek Fellowship as one of his career goals. “I finally accomplished that, so it’s pretty cool,” he said. In addition to the money, the national recognition should help his work: “It’s already opened the door to some potential collaborations; people want to work with me because of this project.” Each year, AISC selects a promising non-tenured university faculty member as the AISC Milek Fellow. The award was renamed after William A. Milek Jr., former AISC Vice President of Engineering and Research, to recognize his invaluable contributions to AISC and the structural steel industry as a whole.

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Articles inside

Donor and Industry Recognition

34min
pages 43-52

Recent Graduate Advisory Board Aims to Strengthen Relationships with Alumni

2min
pages 41-42

Gift to KU Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering Honors Professor

3min
page 40

KU Engineering Launches Career Accelerator Lecture Series

1min
page 39

Alumni Profiles

2min
page 38

KU Bioengineering Program Awarded Grant to Expand Opportunities for Underrepresented Students

3min
page 37

Haskell Indian Nations University KU Engineering Partner to Develop ‘Center for Justice’

4min
pages 33-34

Civil Engineering Master’s Student Lands Prestigious Fellowship

2min
page 31

KU Leading Program to Bring Teachers into Research Labs Design Education to Draw Diverse Scholars to Engineering

4min
pages 35-36

Student Achievements

2min
page 32

Engineering Student Earns Prestigious Astronaut Scholarship

3min
page 30

KU Engineering Achieves Record Highs in Degrees Awarded

1min
page 29

‘DeepRacer’ Competition Sharpens Programming Coding Skills

2min
page 28

KU Engineering Professors Wins Prestigious Fellowship for Bridge Lifespan Research

2min
page 23

Bumper Scooter Redesign Creates Opportunities for Toddler

4min
pages 26-27

Farokhi Receives National Recognition for Career Achievement

3min
page 24

Faculty Achievements

1min
page 25

Blunt Named Finalist for A.F. Harvey Engineering Research Prize

3min
page 22

Study: Constructed Wetlands Offer Best Protection for Agricultural Runoff

3min
pages 20-21

KU Working to Advance Gas Separation with Green Materials

4min
pages 18-19

Researchers Will Develop Green Technology to Recycle Refrigerants That Drive Climate Change

4min
pages 16-17

KU Awarded Grant to Study Transportation Needs for Underrepresented Youth in KC Metro

3min
pages 14-15

Sutley Named Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity Inclusion & Belonging

3min
pages 7-8

At-Home COVID-19 Test Developed at KU Moves Toward Production

2min
pages 9-10

KU Engineering Partners with Kansas Community to Test Energy-Efficient Materials

3min
page 11

Celebrating 50 Years of Diversity & Women’s Programs

5min
pages 5-6

KU Research Aims to Help People With Cognitive Impairments Use Automated Driving Systems

4min
pages 12-13
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