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MNE Announces Three
Faculty Promotions
The Department of
Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering announces the promotion
of three of its faculty; Dr. Mary Frecker, Dr. Eric Marsh
and Dr. Matthew Mench.
Dr.
Mary Frecker - Dr. Frecker
was promoted to the rank of full professor. Dr. Frecker
is well-established in the area of optimizing smart structures
and compliant mechanisms. More recently, she has been
working in the area of developing small surgical instruments
using compliant mechanisms. She has been recognized
for her research contributions both internal and external
to Penn State. She regularly teaches the capstone design
course in which many of her student teams have been given
awards during the Learning Factory Showcase. She has
advised a number of graduate students in which one of
her more recent co-advisees securing a faculty position
at Virginia Tech. She is active within ASME and this
year will serve as the chair for the ASME Adaptive Structures
Technical Committee.
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Dr.
Eric Marsh - Dr. Marsh was promoted to
the rank of full professor. Dr. Marsh has established
himself in the area of precision manufacturing with his
approach involving both mathematical modeling and experimental
verification. He has worked with a number of industrial
partners to develop precision manufacturing techniques.
His teaching efforts have involved a variety of courses
and he has been recognized for his teaching efforts through
a number of internal and external awards. Dr. Marsh
is very active in two professional societies including
the American Society of Precision Engineers (ASPE) and
ASME. He has organized numerous meetings and has served
in a leadership role at the national level on the ASPE
Board of Directors.
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Dr.
Matthew Mench - Dr.
Mench was promoted to the rank of associate professor
with tenure. Dr.
Mench's
area of expertise is thermal sciences with an emphasis
on fuel cells. He has created a laboratory, the Fuel
Cell Dynamics and Diagnostics Lab, in which he and his
students developed measurement methods that allow him
to quantify water starvation in thin membrane electrode
assemblies. Just this past year, he received the prestigious
NSF CAREER award. He has contributed to our Department’s
teaching through a range of courses including a new technical
elective that he developed on fuel cell applications.
He has been recognized for his teaching efforts through
a 2006 PSES Teaching Award. He is an active member
in ASME, in the Electrochemical Society, and in organizing
the Gordon Conferences.
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