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Funding from Cisco Research Will Support Innovative Collaborative … – University of California San Diego

The University of California San Diego will receive support from Cisco Research, for eight engineering projects that will tap into the strengths of UC San Diego researchers in cybersecurity, networking and distributed systems. Cisco Research conducts research in new and emerging areas of interest to Cisco, with the goal to achieve business, societal and technology impact.

Cisco Research finds its home within Outshift by Cisco, which serves as Cisco's incubation engine, and as a result can tap into the advantages of a startup-like environment within the broader corporate backing of Cisco. Outshift is dedicated to pioneering new businesses and new markets in cutting-edge technology domains, including Cloud Native Application Security, Edge Native, Quantum, and Artificial Intelligence.

Funding through a first-of-its-kind agreement between the university and Cisco Research will advance projects led by researchers in the Center for Networked Systems and the departments of Computer Science and Engineering and Electrical and Computer Engineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.

After a rigorous evaluation process, an initial five projects were selected to receive support through a Master Sponsored Research Agreement (MSRA). Additional projects will receive funding in subsequent quarters.

"We are delighted to receive funding from Cisco for these innovative projects," said Stefan Savage, a professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering and co-director of the Center for Networked Systems. "This collaboration allows us to advance research in crucial areas such as federated learning, natural language processing, recommender systems, cybersecurity, and carbon-aware computing. We are grateful for Cisco's support and their commitment to building ongoing relationships with the faculty they fund."

The initial projects funded are:

We have a rich history with Cisco not only sponsoring research in new and emerging areas with our exceptionally distinguished faculty but also in providing a pipeline of diverse talent and innovative startups, said Anne ODonnell, theSenior Executive Director for Corporate Strategy and Engagementfor UC San Diego. Together, the Cisco-UC San Diego team is truly advancing the state of the art in cybersecurity, networking and distributed systems. We look forward to a long term and fruitful partnership to generate real world results.

Cody Noghera, the chief corporate relations officer for the Jacobs School of Engineering, said that through the MSRA, we've sprinted swiftly down the path of true collaboration, and the work has only just begun. This partnership with Cisco has provided a strong bridge across our respective organizational boundaries, seamlessly blending our expertise and processes. Moving forward, we will continue to exchange innovative ideas, enhancing efficiency and fostering meaningful collaborations."

Cisco has expressed its excitement about partnering with UC San Diego and intends to strengthen its ties with the funded faculty members.

Cisco Research has had a long history of working with eminent faculty in several marquee universities across the world to conduct advanced research in technology. This MSRA with UC San Diego enables us to fund a vast variety of projects in emerging areas of technology that are of strategic interest to Cisco. We really view this as a beginning of a great relationship as we expect to fund more projects in the coming quarters and years. Its particularly exciting to work with faculty at UC San Diego, where I went to graduate school for my Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering, said Ramana Kompella, Head of Cisco Research.

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Paducah Area Chamber of Commerce awards contract to Bacon … – Paducah Sun

The Paducah Area Chamber of Commerce has awarded a fixed-price subcontract to Bacon Farmer Workman Engineering & Testing, Inc. (BFW) to prepare an analysis and future plans for re-industrialization of the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant site. The work will be completed over the next two years and provide the local community with a comprehensive road map for the future of the Department of Energy (DOE) site.

The contract will be funded through a $2 million grant awarded to the Paducah Chamber from the DOE Office of Environmental Management. The Chamber was awarded the grant in June after Sen. Mitch McConnell and Cong. James Comer secured the funding.

It is exciting to award this work to a firm headquartered in Paducah, said Sandra Wilson, Paducah Chamber President/CEO. We believe this team will work diligently with community stakeholders to develop a plan that is well suited for the future. This is a critical planning effort for the community and the region. The work completed with this study will address the future of the site including land availability, economic development prospects and future workforce.

BFW is partnering with Geosyntec Consultants, a consulting firm of engineers, scientists, and innovators out of Knoxville, Tennessee. Both BFW and Geosyntec are currently performing work at the site and bring in-depth, site-specific knowledge to the re-industrialization project. Geosyntec has experience developing similar plans for other DOE sites and communities, most recently the re-industrialization of the Oak Ridge, Tennessee site.

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Carroll Engineering Corp. adds new office in Lehigh Valley – The Mercury

WARRINGTON Carroll Engineering Corp. is expanding its presence in the region with the opening of its newest office location. The company, headquartered in Warrington, Bucks County, has opened an office in Easton, 101 Larry Holmes Drive, Suite 201.

The strategic expansion underscores Carroll Engineerings unwavering commitment to its valued clients in the Lehigh Valley and Northampton County regions, the company said in a press release announcing the new location. By establishing a presence in Easton, the company said it aims to enhance its service delivery and foster stronger relationships with its clientele.

Eastons vibrant community is a perfect fit for our growth trajectory. This new office not only brings us closer to our clients in the region but also allows us to be an active participant in the communitys development, Thomas A. Gockowski, president of Carroll Engineering, said in a statement.

Carroll Engineering Corp. was founded in 1973, and has grown to become one of the largest consulting engineering, planning, and surveying firms in the Greater Philadelphia region, according to information on its website. The company provides professional services that include: water facilities engineering, wastewater engineering and municipal engineering to a variety of authority, municipal, public and private clients throughout the region.

In addition to Warrington, Bucks County and the new Easton office, the company has offices in King of Prussia, Montgomery County; Malvern, Chester County; and Hillsborough, Somerset County, N.J.

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Ohio Electrical Engineer Sentenced to 30 Months in Prison for Tax … – Department of Justice

John Everson, of Liberty Center, Ohio, was sentenced today to 30 months in prison for evading taxes by using a sham trust to conceal income he earned from his electrical engineering business. A federal jury convicted Everson in October 2022 of three counts of tax evasion.

According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, from approximately 2009 through 2016, Everson earned more than $2.3 million in income from the business. He attempted to conceal much of this income and evade the IRS by instructing clients to make payments to a trust that he controlled. Everson used the trust money to pay personal expenses and make large cash withdrawals. He also funneled some of the trust funds to other bank accounts held in the names of non-profit organizations that he and several family members controlled, even listing his home and airplane in the name of a non-profit organization. In total, Eversons conduct caused a loss to the IRS of $658,487.

In addition to the term of imprisonment, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey J. Helmick for the Northern District of Ohio ordered Everson to serve two years of supervised release and pay restitution to the United States.

Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice Departments Tax Division and U.S. Attorney Rebecca C. Lutzko for the Northern District of Ohio made the announcement.

IRS-Criminal Investigation investigated the case.

Trial Attorney Sarah Ranney of the Tax Division and Assistant U.S. Attorney Gene Crawford for the Northern District of Ohio prosecuted the case.

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Chris Schuh named dean of Northwestern University McCormick … – MIT News

A first-year graduate student in MITs Department of Materials Science and Engineering (DMSE) in 2007, Tim Rupert was prepared to present research at a Materials Research Society conference in Boston, his first presentation since joining the lab of Professor Chris Schuh.

The slides were all ready, the story was all ready I practiced it, and I was ready to go, says Rupert, now a professor of materials science and engineering at the University of California at Irvine. And then the Saturday before my Monday talk, I was doing some microscopy and found something really cool but it totally changed my story. And when I say totally, I mean, it went from a yes to a no.

Surprised and worried that weeks of work had just been upended, Rupert shared the findings with his advisor. Instead of responding with dismay about the upcoming presentation, Schuh was excited to dig into the data, find out what it meant, and rework the story last-minute.

He was very calming, Rupert said. It really helped me go from stressed to excited about the results.

The anecdote of even-tempered mentorship is typical among recollections about Schuh, who was recently named dean of the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science at Northwestern University. Current and past students describe a tough but dedicated advisor with an abiding interest in their work and future success.

But a committed and inspiring educator is just one of the descriptors students and faculty members alike use to describe Schuh. Having served in DMSE for 21 years nine of them as department head Schuh is also remembered as a world-class scientist, an effective administrator, a repeat entrepreneur, and a generous and collaborative colleague.

A multidimensional brilliance

Like many here at MIT, Chris is brilliant. But whats unique about Chris is the multidimensionality of his brilliance, says Jeffrey Grossman, the Morton and Claire Goulder and Family Professor in Environmental Systems and former department head of DMSE. He can make contributions and operate at this extraordinary level in many different ways.

Schuhs expertise is metallurgy, a classical field to which Schuh brought loads of innovation. Members of his research lab made nanostructured nickel-tungsten coatings, which improved the durability and performance of many metal component surfaces. Lab members also developed nanocrystalline alloys that can be processed rapidly in large forms, with improved strength for structural applications such as military vehicles, and a ceramic-based material that can toggle between different shapes.

Schuhs research has led to several companies, including Xtalic Corp., which commercialized his labs process for producing the metallic wear-and-corrosion-resistant coatings now used in the connectors of electronic devices worldwide. Other spinouts are additive manufacturing company Desktop Metal and Foundation Alloy, a metal parts production company co-founded with former student Rupert.

As department head from 2011 to 2020, Schuh is credited with big initiatives that expanded the size, clout, and prestige of DMSE. For one, he transitioned the department from a centralized office arrangement; previously, the department shared human resources and finance functions with the Department of Chemical Engineering. Under his leadership, Schuh built DMSE headquarters from the ground up, including hiring key staff.

Schuh increased the size of the faculty and acquired more physical space for offices and labs. He also launched successful fundraising campaigns, secured fellowship funding for first-year graduate students, and rolled out successful online materials science courses. He put our department at the cutting edge of MIT, Grossman says.

Caroline Ross, the Ford Professor of Engineering and interim head of DMSE, says Schuhs success as an administrator owed in large part to his skill for building agreement among co-workers.

He managed to accomplish a lot because he was good at listening, says Ross. He took people's thoughts and feelings into consideration and found a way to make his ideas work for the majority of people so that he could get a consensus for what he wanted to do.

Tough love

When asked how he does it all, Schuh is modest.

The secret is I do things that I enjoy. Ive always gravitated toward activities that seem like fun, Schuh says. That goes for research, teaching, academic leadership, or entrepreneurship. I did those things because they seemed like they were the right things to do at the time for pushing the science and the technology forward and, and by extension, pushing the community forward, pushing the department forward.

That Schuh enjoys the roles he fills, especially those of researcher and educator, is evident to the students hes advised over the years. Veera Panova, a current graduate student in Schuhs research group, says every meeting with him is a productive and positive experience.

Hes excited about the work were doing, Panova says. I think his excitement fuels us to do better and continue pushing through the challenges and really dig deep and figure out what is at the heart of the problem or the question that we're trying to answer.

(The Schuh Group, which is relocating with Schuh, has already started taking on new individuals from Northwestern. Schuh will advise most MIT students in the group remotely until they matriculate.)

Shiyun Ruan, a graduate student in Schuhs group from 2005 to 2010, says it was that same sense of optimism that drove her even in times of uncertainty.

I would go into his office and say, I got crappy data, and he would always encourage me to look for the pony in the mud, says Ruan, principal technical program manager at Commonwealth Fusion Systems, a fusion power company spun out of MIT in Devens, Massachusetts. But hes also tough he sets his standards high. Hes not going to say, Oh, because you have completed X years you can graduate. He really makes sure that every student that graduates from his group meets his good enough standard.

Tough is another oft-repeated word people whove worked with Schuh use to describe him but its not a criticism; its an acknowledgement of the high expectations he has of them.

When hes tough, its about the science, says Eliana Feygin, another graduate student in Schuhs research lab. Its never in a mean spirit at all. Its very much like, I think you need to think more about this. I think you need to dig deeper into this.

Returning to roots

With his move to Northwestern, Schuh is returning to his alma mater he earned his PhD there in 2001. Theyre in a very exciting moment where they have a new president, they have new leadership, and they have a genuine excitement about growing engineering, Schuh says.

With a materials engineer at the helm of McCormick, Schuh sees the chance to put materials at the rightful center of engineering disciplines. Materials science naturally integrates with every other discipline, with mechanical engineering for mechanical devices, with electrical engineering for electronic devices, with biomedical engineering, with civil engineering, with all of the other engineering disciplines, Schuh says. So leadership having a perspective from materials, it makes sense to me because it's a discipline that can connect and does connect very effectively with all those other disciplines. Im excited about that opportunity.

That said, leaving MIT and DMSE isnt easy.

Many of the faculty have been my friends for now over 20 years. I'm leaving my best friends behind, and that is very challenging for me, Schuh says. But that's tempered by the fact that they will still be my friends. Ill just be not as physically close to them.

Ross, the interim head of DMSE, reflects on the type of person Northwestern is getting.

Hes a real colleague, someone who collaborates and listens. Hes a first-class scientist. He's done fantastic work in metals, she says. Then she laughs and continues, And we have to watch out. They have a really good department already. It's only going to get better with him joining it.

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Formerly incarcerated students dive into engineering research … – Engineering at Princeton University

Before his internship at Princeton University this summer, Wali Palmer knew lasers as highly focused beams of light. But his research experience at Princeton opened Palmers eyes to laser-based devices that could detect disease, perform surgeries and sense dangerous gases and put him on a path toward designing them.

Thats a whole next level of technology, said Palmer, who will begin his second year at Rutgers University-Camden this fall.

Palmer, who is interested in computing and electrical engineering, took an unusual path to Princeton. He is one of four formerly incarcerated students who took part in this summers internship program introducing them to research in STEM fields. The four labs that hosted this years interns were led by engineering faculty.

Bridgett vonHoldt, an associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, directs the program, which is funded by the National Science Foundation. VonHoldt launched the internship as a virtual program in 2021, in partnership with the Universitys Prison Teaching Initiative and the New Jersey Scholarship and Transformative Education in Prisons Consortium (NJ-STEP), which helps identify and support candidates for the program.

Working closely with Ph.D. student Andres Correa Hernandez, Palmer helped Professor Claire Gmachls research team use software to design new lasers more efficiently, so they dont waste time and materials testing devices.

Education and knowledge are really for everyone, at every moment in life, no matter what, said Gmachl, the Eugene Higgins Professor of Electrical Engineering. Students with more life experience often have a much clearer vision of what they want to do, and that poses its own challenges, and makes it interesting to train students in a focused, efficient way, she said.

Palmer said his research experience has been liberating, because its given me a new perspective on technology thats going to change lives.

In addition to Gmachl, Princeton Engineering faculty members Craig Arnold, Jerelle Joseph and Andrej Komrlj served as mentors to interns in this summers program, along with graduate students from their research groups who served as day-to-day peer mentors.

Intern Paul Boyd worked with Joseph, assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering, and Ph.D. student Ananya Chakravarti on a project to explore the impacts of mutations on the behavior of RNA binding proteins, which may play a role in some types of dementia.

In Komrljs mechanical and aerospace engineering research group, intern Ali Muslim worked with Ph.D. student Tejas Dethe on simulations to investigate the properties of phononic crystals materials that can interact with sound in precise ways to produce desired acoustic effects.

Intern Claude McDougal took a different path, analyzing university research transfer processes and how they might be applied to a new technology from Arnolds laboratory. Arnold, the Susan Dod Brown Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and vice dean for innovation at Princeton, is leading the development of carbon-based aerogels for applications such as water purification and desalination.

McDougal, a student at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas who spent the summer at Princeton, said he was interested in learning about the phases of moving that from research to something real in the marketplace. How do you go from a problem that needs to be solved, from research to an invention? And then, how do you protect that intellectual property?

McDougals peer mentor, Ph.D. student Mohd Shaharyar Wani, said the project deepened his own knowledge of the patent process. He also made a point of introducing McDougal to the techniques used to characterize new materials. Bringing together this knowledge broadens the thought process, said Wani. It helped him learn to put patent claims in a very precise manner to have more impact.

Before embarking on research projects, interns in the program spent two weeks taking a course on Scientific Thought and Practice, taught by Amanda Quirk of Columbia University; and a computing course led by Princeton Research Computing instructors from the University community.

Computing is now so important as the third pillar of scientific research along with theory and experiment, said Ma. Florevel (Floe) Fusin-Wischusen, manager of the Princeton Institute for Computational Science and Engineering. This was the first year that the institute partnered with this program to share and showcase Princetons computing resources, said Fusin-Wischusen.

The interns took a private tour of Princetons High-Performance Computing Research Center, a 48,000-square-foot facility north of the main campus. The group got a peek inside the data center that enables complex computations for research such as modeling the formation of galaxies and the collisions of subatomic particles. Curtis Hillegas, associate CIO of Research Computing, also highlighted the buildings energy infrastructure and the dual design goals of sustainability and reliability.

Getting to see the massive scale of things going on in the background at the highest of levels [of computing] in the academic world was just mind-blowing, said McDougal of the computing center tour.

The staff of the Prison Teaching Initiative (PTI) help recruit and support the programs interns. PTI has brought higher education classes to prisons around New Jersey since 2006, and is a founding partner of the National Science Foundations STEM-OPS network, which advances STEM learning opportunities for people who are currently and formerly incarcerated.

The program builds on the success of Princetons efforts to expand opportunities for students from other institutions who might not otherwise have access to research as undergraduates. Jannette Carey, associate professor of chemistry, has run a summer research program in molecular biophysics since 2014, and approached vonHoldt with the idea of starting a program specifically for students who were formerly incarcerated.

I often struggle with how to conduct effective outreach and science communication, said vonHoldt, whose research uses genetics to understand the ecology, diversity and evolution and of wild and domesticated canines. I do a lot of seminars and social media, but there are certain populations of students that we have done a disservice to. This, to me, was the most tangible way of reaching a population of students to give them the support that sometimes is really hard to come by.

Along with research and technical training, the internship included career development and support from Dameon Stackhouse, an alumnus of the molecular biophysics summer program who is now a social worker for Somerset County, New Jersey.

Building relationships is a key part of the experience for students, said Stackhouse, who began earning his Rutgers degree while in prison. Only individuals that have been through incarceration can fully understand the dynamics of pursuing your educational goals in this context, with all the challenges and triumphs it entails, he said.

McDougal said that getting to know researchers and the community at Princeton has changed his outlook on the future.

I didnt see myself in the academic world. I didnt really look at that as a possibility, he said. But now I see it as a possibility. Being around younger students keeps you young. It feeds your inner creativity.

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Tesla engineering executive Colin Campbell joins Redwood Materials as technology chief – CNBC

Pallets of depleted lithium-ion batteries at JB Straubel's Redwood Materials are ready for recycling.

Source: CNBC

Redwood Materials, the battery-recycling startup founded by Tesla board member JB Straubel, recently nabbed Tesla's vice president of powertrain engineering, Colin Campbell, to serve as chief technology officer.

Based in Carson City, Nevada, Redwood was founded by Straubel in 2017 while he was still serving as Tesla's CTO. Straubel resigned from Tesla in 2019 to focus on Redwood.

Campbell announced the move on LinkedIn on Monday, capping a 17-year tenure working for Elon Musk's electric vehicle company in a variety of engineering and leadership roles. He thanked his former colleagues at Tesla for a "once-in-a-lifetime experience."

"At Redwood, I will continue to work on electrification but this time, ensuring broad EV and clean energy adoption by solving problems further upstream!" Campbell wrote. "Redwood's mission is to create a circular battery supply chain, localizing the current fragmented system by creating critical battery components at scale in the US for the first time and from an ever-increasing amount of recycled content."

Redwood turns end-of-life electric vehicle batteries and scrap from car factories into raw materials and components to make new battery cells. Straubel told CNBC in February that the company also blends "sustainably mined material" in its manufacturing processes.

Campbell's departure from Tesla follows an announcement earlier this month that the company's finance chief, Zach Kirkhorn, was stepping down, to be replaced by Tesla accounting chief Vaibhav Taneja, who now holds both the chief financial officer and accounting role, according to Tesla's shareholder disclosure.

Redwood has lured top talent away from Tesla for years. Another executive at Redwood, operating chief Kevin Kassekert, previously served as vice president of people and places at Tesla. More than 120 people currently work at Straubel's company after previously working for Tesla, according to LinkedIn data.

Straubel, who is credited as a co-founder of Tesla, was elected by the automaker's shareholders earlier this year to serve as an independent director on the board.

Tesla did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.

WATCH: EV batteries being primarily U.S. sources is still far away

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Engineering agreement for landfill expansion in Jamestown gets … – The Jamestown Sun

JAMESTOWN The Jamestown Public Works Committee in a 4-0 vote recommended approval of an engineering agreement with Interstate Engineering for expansion of the inert landfill.

Councilman David Schloegel was not present at the meeting on Thursday, Aug. 24.

City Engineer Travis Dillman said the city of Jamestown has an existing agreement to work on permits with the North Dakota Department of Environmental Quality for the expansion of the existing cell at the landfill.

What we got is the inert landfill is filling up, he said. We need to actually do some expansion of the existing cell which will ... actually where the road is now, push it a little bit to the north to buy us some time.

Dillman said the engineering agreement would be for creating a new cell on land adjacent to city limit boundaries in Bloom Township.

He said there are projects where the city would like to receive materials to collect the tipping fees associated with it.

One of them is actually even at the (North Dakota) State Hospital as far as the buildings that are looking to come down, he said. Lets be in a position where we can collect that and accept those tipping fees.

The state Legislature approved a one-time appropriation of $4 million to demolish unused buildings at the State Hospital campus, including the administrative building, employee building, associated tunnels, water tower, pig barn and water treatment plant buildings. The buildings are to be demolished by June 30, 2025.

In September 2022, a drone survey conducted on the inert landfill in Jamestown found that it doesnt have much space left for storage of waste, The Jamestown Sun reported.

In other business, the Fire Chief Jim Reuther told the Jamestown Police and Fire Committee that the Jamestown Fire Department is down to 23 firefighters.

Reuther said he will be interviewing two applicants next week.

In other business, the Public Works Committee:

Masaki Ova joined The Jamestown Sun in August 2021 as a reporter. He grew up on a farm near Pingree, N.D. He majored in communications at the University of Jamestown, N.D.

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Bondada Engineering IPO allotment today; Latest GMP, here’s how to check allotment status | Mint – Mint

Bondada Engineering IPO allotment date: Bondada Engineering IPO share allotment will be finalised today (Friday, August 25). The investors who applied for the issue can check the Bondada Engineering IPO allotment status in the registrar's portal, which is Kfin Technologies Ltd.

Investors can find out if and how many shares they have been given through the basis of allotment. The initiation of the refund process will start on Monday, August 28, for individuals not given shares. Those allotted will receive their shares in their demat accounts on Tuesday, August 29.

Bondada IPO shares will get listed on the BSE SME on Wednesday, August 30. If you applied for the shares, here's how you can check allotment status of Bondada Engineering IPO.

If you have applied for the Bondada Engineering IPO, you can check your allotment status immediately on the website of the IPO registrar, Kfin Technologies Ltd. You can check the Bondada Engineering IPO allotment status of your application on this link - https://ris.kfintech.com/ipostatus/

When you click the link mentioned above, you will see 5 links where you can see the status.

Open one of the five provided links, then select Bondada Engineering from the dropdown menu in the select IPO section.

Pick one of all three options to check the status: Application No., Demat Account, or PAN.

- If you choose the application number, type it in and then the captcha code. Click "Submit."

- Enter the captcha code and your account information if you selected Demat Account. Click "Submit."

- PAN is the third option; enter the PAN number and captcha code. Click Submit."

Also Read: Pyramid Technoplast IPO allotment finalised today: GMP ahead of listing, here's how to check allotment status

Bondada Engineering Limited IPO GMP or grey market premium on Friday was +50 higher than the previous trading sessions. This indicates Bondada share price were trading at a premium of 50 in the grey market on Friday, according to topsharebrokers.com

Considering the upper end of the IPO price band and the current premium in the grey market, the estimated listing price of Bondada share price is 125 apiece, which is 66.67% higher than the IPO price of 75.

Bondada Engineering IPO GMP on Thursday was 45. According to topsharebrokers.com, today's IPO GMP trend indicates upside and expects a strong listing. The lowest GMP is recorded at 0 while the highest GMP is 50.

'Grey market premium' indicates investors' readiness to pay more than the issue price.

Also Read: Vishnu Prakash IPO Day 2: Issue subscribed 10.63 times; retail portion booked 12.88x

Bondada Engineering IPO opened for subscription on Friday, August 18, and closed Tuesday, August 22. Bondada IPO price band has been fixed at 75 per equity share of face value of 10 each. Bids can be made for a minimum of 1,600 equity shares and in multiples of 1,600 equity shares thereafter. Bondada Engineering IPO issue price is 7.5 times the face value of the equity share.

Bondada IPO consists of fresh issue of 56,96,000 equity shares aggregating to 42.72 crore. There's no offer for sale (OFS) component. According to company's Red Herring Prospectus (RHP) it intends to use the gross proceeds raised through the issue for meeting long-term working capital requirements, and general corporate purposes.

Also Read: Aeroflex Industries IPO: What GMP, subscription status signal before allotment date

The company's promoters are Raghavendra Rao Bondada, Neelima Bondada, and Satyanarayana Baratam.

Bondada Engineering IPO'S lead manager is Vivro Financial Services Private Ltd, and the registrar is KFin Technologies Ltd.

Bondada Engineering Ltd is a Hyderabad-based infrastructure firm that serves customers across India in the telecom and solar energy industries by offering engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) and operations and maintenance (O&M) services.

Also Read: Crop Life Science IPO allotment finalised: GMP ahead of listing, here's how to check allotment status

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Maria Carreon Joins Chemical Engineering Faculty | University of … – University of Arkansas Newswire

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Maria Carreon, Associate Professor, Chemical Engineering

The Ralph E. Martin Department of Chemical Engineering is excited to welcome Maria Carreon to the department as associate professor. Carreon brings an emerging research program in non-thermal plasma processing to the University of Arkansas.

"I'm so glad to be among chemical engineer peers and students who are truly committed to learn about the limitless chemical transformations in science and engineering," said Carreon. "I'm very excited for the future talent we can shape into excellence."

Adding to the excitement is that this new chapter at the University of Arkansas will be a family matter. Joining Carreon at the university is her daughter, Lucia, who will be enrolled as a first-year student in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences.

Carreon's research includes plasma catalysis, production of platform chemicals, and materials synthesis and design. Her work has recently been published in Catalysis Today, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics and ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering. She will lead the Carreon Research Group within the Ralph E. Martin Department of Chemical Engineering.

"We are excited to welcome Maria to the department and have her research and teaching expertise strengthen our department," saidKeisha Bishop Walters, department head and professor of chemical engineering.

Carreon joins the chemical engineering department this month after serving as a faculty member at the University of Tulsa, South Dakota School of Mines & Technology, and most recently, at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. Coinciding with her research, she has developed a "Plasma Materials" course and published an online tutorial on "Plasma Catalysis."

Carreon completed her bachelor's and master's degrees in chemical engineering at Universidad Michoacana in Mexico and holds a doctorate in chemical engineering from the University of Louisville.

About the Department of Chemical Engineering: Chemical engineering has been a part of the University of Arkansas curriculum since 1903. Today, the Ralph E. Martin Department of Chemical Engineering has an enrollment of over 300 students in its undergraduate and graduate degree programs and houses five endowed chairs and eight endowed professorships to support its faculty. Faculty expertise includes cellular engineering, chemical process safety, advanced materials, computational modeling, and membrane separations. A wide range of fundamental and applied research is conducted in the areas of energy, health, sustainability, and computational chemical engineering. The department is also home to the Chemical Hazards Research Center and is one of three national sites for the Membrane Science, Engineering, & Technology (MAST) Center. The Department of Chemical Engineering is named for alumnus Ralph E. Martin (B.S.Ch.E.'58, M.S.Ch.E.'60) in recognition of his 2005 endowment gift.

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