School of Engineering News
Explained: Why water droplets ‘bounce off the walls
School of Engineering professor explains why some water droplets bounce like a beach ball off surfaces, without ever actually touching them.
Explained: The lifetime of an evaporating liquid drop
New fluids engineering article is published in prestigious journal, Physical Review Letters,
Nano drops a million times smaller than a teardrop explodes 19th century theory
Droplets emanating from a molecular “nano-tap” would behave very differently from those from a household tap 1 million times larger - researchers at the University of Warwick have found. This is potentially crucial step for a number of emerging nano technologies, e.g., manufacture of nano-sized drug particles, lab-on-chip devices for in situ diagnostics, and 3D printers capable of nanoscale resolution
New Modelling of Heterogeneous Systems Centre for Doctoral Training at Warwick
New CDT will train fifty PhD students to tackle pressing societal challenges.
£3.4 million research programme to be led by Warwick engineer
Professor Duncan Lockerby will lead EPSRC project to enable visionary technology powerful enough to cool the sun’s surface.
Skating on Thin Nanofilms - grant success
Prof. Duncan Lockerby (Engineering) and Dr James Sprittles (Mathematics) have received Leverhulme Trust funding for a 3 year postdoctoral position.