Summer NDnano opportunities give undergraduate students in-depth research experience
Notre Dame Nanoscience and Technology (NDnano) welcomed 21 students to campus over the summer as part of the NDnano Undergraduate Research Fellowship (NURF) program. The 2024 cohort included students from the University of Notre Dame, Purdue University, Ball State University, Bethel University, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Universidad de las Américas Puebla, and Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. Each student selected is paired with one or more of Notre Dame’s world class faculty for a 10-week research experience and immersed in the research group – reading relevant research publications, learning proper laboratory safety, and participating in group meetings.
The students from the NURF program have each prepared a written summary, available on the NDnano website, to recap their summer 2024 experience.
“Undergraduate research programs, like NURF, help to introduce students to academic research, and allow students to contribute to research while gaining skills that will benefit them as they develop their career,” said Derek Lake, NDnano associate director. “We are grateful for the partnership with NDnano affiliated faculty that makes this program possible.”
In the summaries, students define the problem being faced and the research goal; describe lab skills acquired, equipment used, and experiments conducted; and explain their results and conclusions. Highlighted here are three student summaries that illustrate the high-level of hands-on experience gained by the students.
In his second summer as part of the NURF program, Notre Dame's Daniel Noronha was able to build on the project he started with Professors Greg Snider and Alexei Orlov (Department of Electrical Engineering) in summer 2023 and continued through the academic year. In his summer 2024 recap, Daniel explained that his task was to design, fabricate, and test aluminum nitride microelectromechanical system resonators (see image) to determine how geometry affects a resonator’s electrical characteristics (resonant frequency and Q factor). Daniel explains his research here.
Working with the groups of Professors Kaiyu Fu (Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry) and Bill Phillip (Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering), Notre Dame's Marie Schafer learned many scientific skills in the course of her project to develop a biocompatible nanostructured membrane to improve the longevity of biosensors. Her skill set now includes casting thin membranes using a spin coating process and functionalizing the membranes, as well as testing, analysis, and explaining her research in different settings and styles, including the Summer Undergraduate Research Symposium. Marie provides details here.
Gergő Németh from the Budapest University of Technology and Economics in Hungary conducted summer research in the Department of Physics and Astronomy with Professor László Forró's group. Over the summer, Gergo explored the possibility of achieving superconductivity in transition metal dichalcogenides through p-type doping. The project involved chemical doping and ionic gating techniques to alter the electronic properties of WSe2 and MoS2 crystals. Learn more about Gergo's project.
Support for the NDnano Fellowships is provided by Notre Dame Research, the Woodward Family Endowment for Excellence in NDnano Undergraduate Research, and other external funding sources supporting faculty research.
The application process for the summer 2025 NURF program opens in December at nano.nd.edu.
Originally published by nano.nd.edu on October 31, 2024.
atLatest Research
- Q&A with Arun Agrawal, Sustainability Initiative director and new Keough School faculty memberThe University of Notre Dame recently announced the appointment of Arun Agrawal, a renowned scholar of environmental politics and sustainable development, as the inaugural director of the Just Transformations to Sustainability…
- de Nicola Center presents 24th annual Fall Conference, “Ever Ancient, Ever New: On Catholic Imagination”More than 1,200 scholars, students, and guests from around the world registered to attend the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture’s 24th annual Fall Conference, “Ever Ancient, Ever New: On Catholic Imagination.” The conference, which begins Thursday, October 31, and concludes on November 2, will feature more than 175 papers, panels, and performances across three days of conversation on the enduring and inexhaustible nature of the Catholic imagination.
- Ethical leadership program unites MENA innovators for regional prosperity and collaborationThis summer, innovative leaders from the Middle East and North Africa gathered together at the University of Notre Dame’s campus to partake…
- Berthiaume Institute announces 2024 Technology Development Fund awardeesThe Berthiaume Institute for Precision Health at the University of Notre Dame has announced the awardees of its Technology Development Fund for 2024. Four projects received funding, each of which aims to enhance a key area of knowledge at the frontier of science and engineering for health. …
- Margie Pfeil: I Would Love to Have a Constructive Dialogue About Distributive JusticeAt the root of the Catholic Worker here locally is our work on housing. I firmly believe that housing is a human right and human duty that serves the common good. Everyone ought to be housed and if we all came together as human beings - or even just here in this local community of South Bend together with Notre Dame - we could house everyone who needs to be housed. There's an invitation in the Catholic social tradition to see these basic issues of need and vulnerability through a lens of God's abundant provision.
- Arun Agrawal to lead Notre Dame’s new University-wide sustainability initiativeArun Agrawal, a renowned scholar of environmental politics and sustainable development, will join the University of Notre Dame on Jan. 1, 2025, as the inaugural director of the Just Transformations to Sustainability Initiative, a key priority in the University’s strategic framework.