Wereley Honored for Work in Adaptive Structures

Wereley Honored for Work in Adaptive Structures

Wereley Honored for Work in Adaptive Structures

Wereley explains testing methods for vibration and shock mitigating seats applied to fast boats developed with Techno-Sciences for the U.S. Navy.
Wereley explains testing methods for vibration and shock mitigating seats applied to fast boats developed with Techno-Sciences for the U.S. Navy.

Norman M. Wereley, Techno-Sciences Professor and associate chair in the Department of Aerospace Engineering at the Clark School, will be honored with the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Adaptive Structures and Material Systems Prize.

According to the ASME website, the Aerospace Division presents the Adaptive Structures and Materials Systems Prize to an individual who has “made significant contributions to the sciences and technologies associated with adaptive structures and/or materials systems.”

Wereley is being recognized primarily for his contributions to the theory and application of semi-active magnetorheological dampers, and their application to occupant protection, vibration isolation, and stability augmentation systems using advanced feedback control strategies. He also has made significant contributions to electrohydraulic actuators, elastomeric damping, composites, pneumatic artificial muscles and their applications to robotics and aerospace actuation systems.

Wereley has co-authored more than 140 journal articles, 10 book chapters, and more than 225 conference articles. He is also co-inventor on 10 patents and more than a dozen pending patents. Many of these patents are being commercialized in collaboration with Techno-Sciences Inc., a local (Beltsville, Md.) firm, as magnetorheological seat suspensions for the SH-60 Seahawk (flight test pending for the U.S. Navy), Rigid Inflatable Boats for the U.S. Special Operations Command (sea trials completed for the U.S. Navy), as well as UH-60 Blackhawk crash protection seating, and mine resistant ambush protected ground vehicle mine blast protection seating, which are both in the development stage.

Wereley will receive the award, and deliver the Adaptive Structures Prize Lecture, at the 20th American Institute of Aeronatuics and Astronautics/ASME/American Helicopter Society Adaptive Structures Conference in April 2012 in Waikiki, Hawaii.

Related Articles:
Wereley Steps Down as Aero Chair
Wereley Receives SPIE Lifetime Achievement Award
Wereley to Chair Department of Aerospace Engineering
ASME Dedicates Conference to Bar-Cohen
Pines, Purekar Win Best Paper Award
Wereley Honored by AIAA for Service
Pines Elected Fellow of ASME
Severinsky to Receive Edison Patent Award

December 16, 2011


Prev   Next

Current Headlines

Adjustable Drug Release Marks New Milestone in Ingestible Capsule Research

Celebrating a Legend: Matt Scassero's Retirement Event

ECE Ph.D. Student Samarth Chopra Receives NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

MATRIX-Affiliated Faculty Solving Challenges From Sea to Space

Seven UMD Students Receive 2025 Vertical Flight Foundation Scholarships

UMCP, UMSOM Launch B.S.-M.D. Program to Bridge Engineering, Data Science, and Medicine

Adjustable Drug Release Marks New Milestone in Ingestible Capsule Research

ECE Ph.D. Student Itay Ozer Published in Optica

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search News

Archived News

Events Resources

Events Calendar