 |
 |
|
about.facilities
With the construction of the new integrated engineering facility adjacent (the Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences) to our current location in Hudson Hall, the department is expecting to expand its facilities in future years. In the past, the fixed and limited size of the department's physical space and facilities has necessitated the development of multiple use laboratory space in many teaching and research areas. In general, our laboratory and computer facilities currently fall into the following categories:
Engineering Mechanics Laboratories
The 2400 ft2 space (Room 053) of this laboratory
is divided into three nearly equal work areas. The first
area is partitioned for the desks of ten graduate assistants,
and for conference tables for research discussions and for
students requiring extra help in the mechanics courses. The
second area is devoted to the laboratory experiments of the
three courses: Mechanics of Solids, Dynamics, and Experimental
Systems. The experimental equipment here, which is also used
in research projects, includes two universal testing machines,
a torsion machine, several computers, and transducers for
load, displacement, strain, and acceleration measurements.
Included are a variety of bench-top, hands-on experiments.
The third area of this laboratory is devoted to upper level
course projects and to research. The equipment here includes
a polariscope for stress analysis, storage oscilloscopes,
a Kistler force plate system for biomechanical research,
a high speed cine camera, a camcorder, special equipment
to evaluate the mechanical properties of rubber-like materials,
multiple-channel data retrieval systems, computers, and state-of-the-art
software for animation and data analysis.
[back to top] |
| |
Solid Mechanics Laboratory
Hudson Hall room 053 includes (2) 10k Tinius Olsen electric
load frames, torsion tester, dial indicators, and data acquisition
equipment.
Courses which use this facility include: EGR 075L Mechanics
of Solids.
[back to top] |
| |
Data Acquisition Portion of the Laboratory
Hudson Hall Room 053: 10 personal computers with Matlab data
acquisition toolbox, National Instruments data acquisition
cards, sensors, experiments, data visualization and statistical
data analysis.
Courses which use this facility include: EGR
053L Computational Methods in Engineering.
[back to top] |
| |
Structural Dynamics Laboratory
Hudson Hall Room 053 includes an 11k servo-hydraulic shaker,
sensors, data acquisition and control equipment.
Courses which use this facility include: CE 130L Structural
Design and Optimization.
[back to top] |
| |
Environmental Engineering Laboratories
Research and teaching facilities in environmental engineering
include wet and dry laboratories equipped to study the range
of physical, chemical, and biological processes, and water
resources research topics. This 597 ft2 laboratory
is equipped with autoclaves, media preparation facilities
and fume hoods, bioreactors, and analytical instrumentation
including atomic absorption spectroscopy, gas chromatography,
microscopes, a laser particle counter, viscometers, turbidimeters,
and spectrophotometers. Calorimetry equipment for the measurement
of heat values of secondary fuels, air classifiers interfaced
with computers, as well as indoor and outdoor water resources
monitoring devices including flumes, venture meters, and
digital computation hardware are also available.
Environmental Engineering Lab, Hudson Hall room 027A (597
ft2).
Courses which use this facility include: CE 120L, Chemistry
and Microbiology for Environmental Engineers; and CE 124L
Environmental Engineering.
[back to top] |
| |
Fluid Mechanics Laboratory
The fluids mechanics laboratory is used for both graduate
and undergraduate educational opportunities. In this lab
the students investigate a variety of topics related to fluid
flow, ranging from fundamental mechanics to exploring more
complex issues related to subcritical/supercritical flow
regimes related to open channel hydraulics. This laboratory
is equipped with a hydraulic workbench and flume.
Fluid Mechanics Lab, Hudson Hall room 024C (356 ft2):
Hydraulic workbench and flume.
Courses which use this facility include: CE 122L Fluid Mechanics.
[back to top] |
| |
Soil Mechanics Laboratory
Currently, the soil mechanics laboratory occupies one room
with triaxial equipment and shares another room with the
structural lab. The soil mechanics equipment includes: three
pressure and three force controlled consolidation testers,
a permeameter, triaxial testing equipment with complete air,
water, and vacuum lines for 5 loading frames, as well as
compaction and sieve analysis equipment.
Soil Mechanics Laboratory, Hudson Hall rooms 010 (460 ft2)
and 022 (383 ft2): Sieving, compaction, penetrometers,
consolidation and tri-axial testing.
Courses which use this facility include: CE 139L Introduction
to Soil Mechanics.
[back to top] |
| |
Computer Laboratory
The computer laboaratory is the networked cluster used by
graduate and undergraduate students for many of their classes.
Equipped with state-of-the-art computer hardware and software,
this computing center is used for both instructional and
after class assignments.
Computer Lab, Room 209 (1000 ft2): 16 personal
computers with flat-panel display, laser printer, large-format
plotter, CAD design software, engineering analysis software,
GIS software.
Courses which use this facility include: EGR 150L, Engineering
Communication; CE 123L Water Resources Engineering; CE 133L
Concrete and Composite Structures; CE 134L Metallic Structures;
CE 161 Architectural Engineering I; CE 192 Integrated Structural
Design; and CE193 Integrated Environmental Design.
[back to top] |
| |
Structural Mechanics and Materials
Laboratory
This laboratory, located in Hudson Hall room 037 and 039,
contains a 200,000-lb MTS closed-loop hydraulic testing machine
with state-of-the-art computer control and digital data collection
capabilities. It is supplemented by an older 400,000 lb Tinius-Olsen
testing machine that is employed for structural engineering
laboratory demonstrations and testing requirements, such
as larger concrete cylinders, which are beyond the capacity
of the MTS machine. Adjacent to this laboratory is a moisture
closet for curing concrete samples and specimens, and environmental
chambers capable of subjecting test specimens to freeze-thaw
and to elevated temperature cycles. A second MTS system,
capable of high frequency fatigue loading, is located in
the Engineering Annex.
Concrete Lab Hudson Hall room 037 (245 ft2) and
039 (314 ft2) : 400k Tinius Olsen load frame,
200k MTS servo-hydraulic load frame, specimen preparation,
concrete mixing.
Courses which use this facility include: CE 133L Concrete
and Composite Structures.
[back to top] |
|
|

contact information:
 |
David Schaad
Assistant Department Chair
(919) 660-5174
[e-mail address]
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Edmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering
Duke University
Box 90287 Hudson Hall
Durham, NC 27708-0287
Phone: (919) 660-5200
Fax: (919) 660-5219
|
|
|