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Creating Interdisciplinary Sustainability Focused Projects for Engineering Students Through Industry Partnerships

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Conference

2024 ASEE North Central Section Conference

Location

Kalamazoo, Michigan

Publication Date

March 22, 2024

Start Date

March 22, 2024

End Date

March 23, 2024

Page Count

13

DOI

10.18260/1-2--45602

Permanent URL

https://sftp.asee.org/45602

Download Count

19

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Paper Authors

biography

Aiden James Landis University of Pittsburgh

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B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh
Completing M.S. in Sustainable engineering from the University of Pittsburgh

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Robert J Kerestes University of Pittsburgh Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0002-7249-5853

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Robert Kerestes, PhD, is an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Pittsburgh's Swanson School of Engineering. Robert was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He got his B.S. (2010), his M.S (2012). and his PhD (2014)

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David V.P. Sanchez University of Pittsburgh Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0001-7398-3130

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David V.P. Sanchez is an Associate Professor in the Swanson School of Engineering’s Civil & Environmental Engineering department and the Associate Director for the Mascaro Center for Sustainable Innovation at the University of Pittsburgh. He serves as the Program Director for the Master’s in Sustainable Engineering, the Undergraduate Certificate in Sustainability, the John C. Mascaro Faculty Fellows, and the Sustainability Global Engagement grant. He is the faculty lead for the University Honors College Food Ecosystem Scholar Community.

His research lab, Sustainable Design Labs, focuses on fusing analytical chemistry, sustainability design principles and data analytics to address Water and Sustainability grand challenges. Current thrusts focus on Smarter Riversheds, Microbial Fuel cells and advanced oxidation and separation processes.

Focused on co-creating long term partnerships that synergize community vision with Pitt’s core competencies of research and education, Sanchez has built up Pitt Hydroponics in Homewood, founded Constellation Energy Inventor labs for K-12 students, and re-created the Mascaro Center’s Teach the Teacher sustainability program for science educators in the region.

As a teacher he designed and created the Sustainability capstone course which has annually partnered with community stakeholders to address sustainability challenges at all scales. Past projects have included evaluating composting stations in Wilkinsburg, studying infrastructure resilience in Homewood, enabling community solar in PA, improving energy efficiency in McCandless Township, and improving water quality in our rivers. He teaches core Sustainability courses, labs in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Department, electives in the Innovation and Entrepreneurship program, the First-Year Engineering program, and International Study Abroad programs.

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Tony Lee Kerzmann University of Pittsburgh Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0002-9445-3814

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Dr. Tony Kerzmann’s higher education background began with a Bachelor of Arts in Physics from Duquesne University, as well as a Bachelor’s, Master’s, and PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh. After graduation, Dr. Kerzmann began his career as an assistant professor of Mechanical Engineering at Robert Morris University which afforded him the opportunity to research, teach, and advise in numerous engineering roles. He served as the mechanical coordinator for the RMU Engineering Department for six years, and was the Director of Outreach for the Research and Outreach Center in the School of Engineering, Mathematics and Science. In 2019, Dr. Kerzmann joined the Mechanical Engineering and Material Science (MEMS) department at the University of Pittsburgh. He is the advising coordinator and associate professor in the MEMS department, where he positively engages with numerous mechanical engineering advisees, teaches courses in mechanical engineering and sustainability, and conducts research in energy systems.

Throughout his career, Dr. Kerzmann has advised over eighty student projects, some of which have won regional and international awards. A recent project team won the Utility of Tomorrow competition, outperforming fifty-five international teams to bring home one of only five prizes. Additionally, he has developed and taught fourteen different courses, many of which were in the areas of energy, sustainability, thermodynamics, dynamics and heat transfer. He has always made an effort to incorporate experiential learning into the classroom through the use of demonstrations, guest speakers, student projects and site visits. Dr. Kerzmann is a firm believer that all students learn in their own unique way. In an effort to reach all students, he has consistently deployed a host of teaching strategies into his classes, including videos, example problems, quizzes, hands-on laboratories, demonstrations, and group work. Dr. Kerzmann is enthusiastic in the continued pursuit of his educational goals, research endeavors, and engagement of mechanical engineering students.

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Abstract

Sustainability has become an important part of engineering education at University X. Undergraduate engineering students can pursue a certificate in sustainability and graduate students can earn their masters in sustainable engineering. Company Y has done significant work to bring clean electricity and clean water to underdeveloped communities across the globe. To further this work and bring sustainability focused projects into the classroom, company Y explored a partnership with University X. A master’s level independent study was used to help integrate the work of company Y into the engineering curriculum of University X. An interdisciplinary partnership, students in both the electrical engineering industry projects course and the sustainability engineering capstone course would work closely with company Y and their technology to collect data, validate and characterize the performance of the technology, and use data to create designs applicable for situations in developing communities. Through this continued partnership, University X can create experience-based learning opportunities for students and be a test bed for research the sustainable technologies developed by company Y, and company Y can further their goal of bringing sustainable solutions for electricity and water to underdeveloped communities. This paper will summarize the engagement between University X and company Y, the plans for future educational and research projects and continued partnership between the two, and how this independent study course helped integrate this partnership into the engineering curriculum.

Landis, A. J., & Kerestes, R. J., & Sanchez, D. V., & Kerzmann, T. L. (2024, March), Creating Interdisciplinary Sustainability Focused Projects for Engineering Students Through Industry Partnerships Paper presented at 2024 ASEE North Central Section Conference, Kalamazoo, Michigan. 10.18260/1-2--45602

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