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Civil and Mechanical Systems CMS NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION

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Title: Civil and Mechanical Systems CMS NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION


1
Civil and Mechanical Systems (CMS) NATIONAL
SCIENCE FOUNDATION
A. Galip Ulsoy, Ph.D. Director, Division of Civil
and Mechanical Systems aulsoy_at_nsf.gov (703)
292-4613
2
The Division of Civil and Mechanical Systems (CMS)
  • Engineers practice the art of problem solving to
    serve society, using mathematics and science.
    Engineering is everywhere in our daily lives.
    The CMS activities are most evident in structures
    and machines, and are primarily based on the
    physical sciences, especially mechanics (i.e.,
    statics and dynamics) and the geosciences, and
    mathematics.
  • The Mission of CMS is
  • to expand the fundamental knowledge underpinning
    for the engineering profession in application to
    mechanical systems and the constructed
    environment, and
  • to support the rapid development and deployment
    of research in service to society and to reduce
    risks induced by natural and technological
    hazards.
  • CMS annual research program budget is
    approximately 60M

3
CMS Award Information
FY02 award size 88k/year median FY02 mean
award duration 2.9 years FY03 CMS has already
received over 700 proposals for FY03 consideration
4
CMS Research Programs
  • Program Directors for the Five Research Programs
  • Dynamic System Modeling, Sensing Control
  • Program Directors Shih-chi Liu (sliu_at_nsf.gov)
    and M. (Tomi) Tomizuka (mtomizuk_at_nsf.gov)
  • Solid Mechanics and Materials Engineering
  • Program Directors Ken Chong (kchong_at_nsf.gov) and
    Jorn Larsen-Basse (jlarsenb_at_nsf.gov)
  • Structural Systems and Engineering
  • Program Directors P. (Bala) Balaguru
    (pbalagur_at_nsf.gov) and Steven McCabe
    (smccabe_at_nsf.gov)
  • Geotechnical and GeoHazards Engineering
  • Program Directors Clifford Astill
    (castill_at_nsf.gov) and Richard Fragaszy
    (rfragasz_at_nsf.gov)
  • Infrastructure and Information Systems
  • Program Directors Miriam Heller
    (mheller_at_nsf.gov) and Dennis Wenger
    (dwenger_at_nsf.gov)
  • Program Directors for the One Major Research
    Equipment Project
  • George E. Brown, Jr. Network for Earthquake
    Engineering Simulation (NEES) Program Directors
    Joy Pauschke (jpauschk_at_nsf.gov) and Vilas
    Mujumdar (vmujumda_at_nsf.gov)
  • CMS Represents NSF as a NEHRP (National
    Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program) Agency
    Priscilla Nelson (pnelson_at_nsf.gov)

5
Dynamic System Modeling, Sensing and
ControlProgram Directors Shih-Chi Liu
(sliu_at_nsf.gov) and M. (Tomi) Tomizuka
(mtomizuk_at_nsf.gov)
  • Research support for
  • modeling of structural dynamics, damping,
    vibrations, acoustics, and kinematics
    relationships.
  • technologies for sensing, acquiring, imaging and
    transmitting information.
  • the inverse problem for interpretation of sensed
    information.
  • sensors for fundamental science and engineering,
    verification of models, performance evaluation.
  • integration of sensors, actuators, controllers,
    and power sources for auto-adaptive applications.
  • Applications to
  • bridges, buildings, infrastructure and other CMS
    systems impacted by aging or extreme events.
  • design, fabrication, and control of micro- and
    nano- dynamic systems.
  • enhanced safety, reliability, cost effectiveness
    of CMS.
  • management and use of large quantities of
    distributed and discrete sensed information.

Vibration of disk-spindle systems - I.Y. Shen
6
Solid Mechanics and Materials Engineering
Program Directors Ken Chong (kchong_at_nsf.gov)
and Jorn
Larsen-Basse (jlarsenb_at_nsf.gov)
  • Fundamental solid and biomechanics of
    deformation, fracture, fatigue, friction, wear,
    and corrosion processes for all materials e.g.,
    nano-structured materials, construction
    materials, and coatings and surface modification
    for service under extreme conditions.
  • Computational materials science - integrated
    experimental and analytical investigations and
    simulation modeling of material nano- and
    micro-structures and connections
  • enabling understanding of macroscale structural
    behavior, and
  • supporting the design and control of mechanical
    properties and performance of materials and
    devices.
  • Strongly interdisciplinary - frequent co-review
    and co-funding within CMS, with all other
    research divisions in ENG, and with the Division
    of Materials Research in MPS

CNT bending experiment (top) vs computational
model (bottom) W.K. Liu
7
Structural Systems and EngineeringProgram
Directors P. (Bala) Balaguru (pbalagur_at_nsf.gov)
and Steven McCabe (smccabe_at_nsf.gov)
  • New technologies for design, construction,
    repair, rehabilitation, upgrade, and maintenance
    of structural materials and systems.
  • Smart materials, advanced polymer materials and
    high-performance steel and concrete materials.
  • Application of sensor systems to structure health
    monitoring and structural control.
  • Durability, safety and reliability of
    construction materials in constructed facilities.
  • Impact of extreme events on the performance of
    constructed facilities.
  • Enhanced experimental and computational research
    that takes advantage of the NEES equipment and
    collaboratory.
  • Foundation/structure interaction.
  • Special research initiative with HUD - PATH
    (Partnership for Advancing Technology in
    Housing).

Three Biaxial Shake Tables University of
Nevada, Reno
8
Geotechnical and GeoHazards EngineeringProgram
Directors Clifford Astill (castill_at_nsf.gov) and
Richard Fragaszy (rfragasz_at_nsf.gov)
  • Urban Excavations, Foundations and Tunneling
  • Rapid Excavations in rock and soil
  • Real-time monitoring of excavation performance
  • Pipelines and underground utilities
  • Intrusive and Non-Intrusive Site Characterization
  • Properties of geologic materials
  • Detection of contaminants, utilities, voids
  • Dynamic properties for site specific earthquake
    hazards evaluation
  • Integration of Earthquake and Tsunami Research
    with NEES
  • Data collection and archiving (post-earthquake
    reconnaissance)
  • Use of NEES facilities for Geotechnical and
    GeoHazards Engineering
  • Software contribution to NEES computational
    platform
  • Enhanced Robustness of Geomaterials and
    Geostructures
  • blast, earthquake, dynamic loads
  • stability under water movement, environmental
    attack
  • International Collaborations

Tsunami wave basin Oregon State University
9
Infrastructure and Information Systems Program
Directors Miriam Heller (mheller_at_nsf.gov) and
Dennis Wenger (dwenger_at_nsf.gov)
  • Advanced information systems and technologies for
    a sustainable infrastructure to sustain the
    nation
  • Applications of networking technology multimedia
    and internet-based data systems, GIS and GPS,
    voice/data communications wireless sensing.
  • Visualization, virtual reality, discrete event
    simulation, system dynamics.
  • Advanced computing paradigms e.g., NNs, GAs,
    agent-based simulation, multi-scale/multi-resoluti
    on models.
  • Decision theory risk assessment performance
    metrics and evaluation impact valuation.
  • CMS system life-cycle valuation, costing,
    management.
  • Construction process modeling and automation,
    scalable construction enterprise systems.
  • Infrastructure systems control/optimization
    (partner with DOT).
  • Hazard readiness, response, and recovery.

Southern California earthquakes and two
permanently instrumented sites
10
The George E. Brown , Jr. Network for Earthquake
Engineering Simulation - NEES http//www.eng.nsf
.gov/nees
  • Earthquake engineering research equipment
  • Major equipment/facility investment of 82M over
    5 years
  • Approximately 15 networked sites nation-wide
  • Networked information infrastructure
    http//www.neesgrid.org
  • Operating subsystem
  • Computational subsystem
  • All equipment and the information infrastructure
    projects completed by end of FY04
  • Operation and use from FY05 through FY14 managed
    by the NEES Consortium http//www.nees.org
  • New Grand Challenges research program

11
NEES Resources
Remote Users (Faculty, Students, Practitioners)
Instrumented Structures and Sites
Simulation Tools Repository
High-Performance Network(s)
Laboratory Equipment
Field Equipment
Curated Data Repository
Leading Edge Computation
Global Connections (FY 2005 FY 2014)
Remote Users (K-12 Faculty and Students)
Laboratory Equipment
12
CMS Emerging Trends and Issues
  • During the next decade there will be
    revolutionary research advances in
  • Sensing the World
  • Multiscale Modeling, Simulation and Design of
    Materials
  • Complex System Vulnerabilities and
    Interdependencies
  • Extreme Events
  • Environment natural systems, technology, and
    design

MEMS Gyro R. Rajamani
Collecting Structural Damage Data at WTC Post 9/11
13
CMS Commitment to Partnerships and Diversity
  • Partnerships in CMS Priority Areas
  • Sensing the World (with ENG divisions DoD
    agencies other SNDR agencies)
  • Multiscale Materials (DoD agencies NSE)
  • Complex Systems (ITR ICIS ENG divisions, SBE
    OSTP national labs)
  • Extreme Events (NSF workshops, NSTCs SNDR, NRC
    panels, EERCs, post-disaster recon, NEHRP
    activities)
  • Partnerships for Initiatives in FY02/03 - HUD and
    USDOT
  • Global Perspective (EU memoranda on earthquake
    engineering, US-Japan, NRCs COBASE, NATO-Russia)
  • Diversity in research, education and integration
    activities
  • Proposal reviews, leadership workshops, industry
    partnering
  • CAREER (gt10 of all NSF proposals), REU, RET,
    IGERT, PFI, STC/ERC/EERC
  • Outreach esp. to new PIs esp. from
    underrepresented groups PUIs, PMSCUs and HBCUs
  • Outreach to professional societies

14
Employment of Scientists and Engineers
18.50
36
E
Government
Sector
S
13
G
Large
Business/Industry
Sector
L
Small
Business/Industry
Sector
32.50
1997 Data from NSF Science Indicators
15
Replenishing the Engineering Workforce
Engineering Bachelors, Masters and Doctoral
Degrees 1991 - 2000
Engineering Bachelors Degrees 1973 - 2000
16
Concluding Remarks
  • What challenges will the 21st century civil and
    mechanical engineer face?
  • Attracting talent, especially from
    underrepresented groups, to civil and mechanical
    engineering
  • Emerging technologies - driven primarily by
    advances in IT, Biotechnology, Nanotechnology,
    Terascale Computing, Cognitive Sciences, ..
  • Extreme events response and mitigation
  • A greater role in the development and
    implementation of national and international
    environmental and energy policy, including the
    hydrogen economy and fuel cells, and sustainable
    infrastructure systems
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