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a medical practitioner wearing a stethoscope points at an AED

Launch of PADmap translates graduate research on defibrillators into a potentially life-saving tool

Milica sits on a bench, smiles at the camera. A concrete pillar, walls and glass panelling are in the background.

Professor Milica Radisic receives a Governor General’s Innovation Award

profile photos of Hill, Branch and Moore, left to right, facing the camera.

U of T Engineering professor and alumni receive Ontario Professional Engineers Awards

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A mixed filling dumpling with Myo Palate's cultivated pork and store-bought vegetable ingredients. The company has partnered with U of T Engineering professor Michael Garton (BME) on a project to further advance their technology. (Photo:  Joanna Wojewoda, courtesy Myo Palate)

New academic-industry partnership aims to lower the cost of cultivated meat

G. Ross Peters in <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i7M4A2YJfzo">a video produced by Engineers Canada</a>, which awarded him the Meritorious Service Award for Professional Service in 2017.

U of T Engineering alumnus appointed to the Order of Canada

The UTWind team, seen here next to their winning prototype turbine at the Open Jet Facility wind tunnel at Delft University of Technology, placed first overall in the International Small Wind Turbine Contest (ISWTC). (Photo: Niels Adema, Hanze University of Applied Sciences)

UTWind places first at the International Small Wind Turbine Contest

Two-dimensional materials could make electronic devices thinner and more flexible, but a new study shows that the variability of their mechanical properties represents a key barrier. (Photo: U.S. Army RDECOM, via Wikimedia Commons)

Mechanical testing will be key to making thinner, more flexible electronics: U of T Engineering study