Structural Engineering

Aerospace Biological Civil Geotechnical Mechanical

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Biological Structural Analysis: e.g. Red Blood Cells

Seminar Speaker
Professor Robert J. Asaro
Seminar Date
Wednesday, Mar 31, 2021 - 12:00 pm
Sponsored By
Robert Asaro
Speaker Bio

Prior to joining UCSD in 1989, Dr. Robert Aaro was an associate professor at Brown University. Asaro also worked as a research scientist at Ford Motor Company and the U.S. Naval Radiological Laboratory. Asaro is a member of the American Society of Metals, the Physics and Chemistry of Solids Committee, and the Materials Research Society. He is a two-time recipient of the NSF Creativity Award (1983, 1989). In 1991, Asaro was awarded the Minerals, Metals & Materials Society/Materials Information Society C.H. Matthewson Gold Medal. Professor Asaro designs and manufactures large-scale composite structures. He is particularly interested in the use of these structures for marine applications such as new pilings to make piers stronger and safer. His pilings are made from molded hollow tubes of advanced composite materials including glass fiber and vinyl ester resin. Recycled plastic sheaths the tubes and provides an abrasion resistant outer surface. The structural composite materials are strong, lightweight, and immune from sea worm attack. They are also highly corrosion resistant. Asaro's research interests also include the bulk processing of high Tc-BSCCo superconductors

This  talk will discuss aspects of biological structural engineering within the SE department at UCSD. The discussion will focus on the differences in dealing with   biological   structures   such as cells and their components  as  compared  to  typical  structures  of  interest  in  say  civil  or aerospace  engineering.  It  will  be  emphasized  that  biological  structures  are paradigms  of  nanotechnology  in  that  the  size  scale  of  the  components  of biological   structures are often   comparable to the distances  of direct interaction  between  them.  It  will  be  emphasized  that  studying  the  elements, i.e. the  components of  biological  structure  outside  their  complete  living organisms  present  enormous  challenges.  Also,  the  types  of  questions  asked are  also  somewhat  different  and  what  is  expected  of  modeling, theory,  and simulation may also be different than in other areas of structural engineering. Hence biological structural   engineering falls within the category of a convergent science requiring the necessity of transcending disciplinary boundaries. The ideas will be  developed  essentially  around studies of the human red blood cell and the physiological phenomena surrounding the functionality of the human erythrocyte.


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