For the first time, the final round of Georgia Tech’s annual Three Minute Thesis (3MT) Competition was held virtually. But, that didn't mean that the 11 students who competed in the finals are any less excited.
Since 2015, Tech’s version of this international competition, which started at The University of Queensland, Australia, has provided graduate students with an opportunity to hone their professional skills and win prize money to help further their research efforts. The competition challenges students to explain their research in three minutes in a way that anyone can understand.
Ten Ph.D. students and one master’s student (who was awarded first place in the master’s category and will be competing for the People’s Choice Award) made the cut to participate in the finals. Congratulations to the following students:
- Andrew Tricker, Chemical Engineering
Cracking the Case of Sustainable Fertilizers: Ambient Ammonia Synthesis Via Mechanocatalysis - Clara Glassman, Medical Physics
Creating the Google Maps of Brain-Behavior Relationships: A New Look at Post Stroke MRIs - Hohyun Lee, Mechanical Engineering
Minimally Invasive Targeted Drug Delivery in the Brain Enhanced by Closed-loop Focused Ultrasound Control - Hongmo Li, Materials Science and Engineering
Plastics That Can Conduct Electricity: How Can They Impact Our Life? - Jelly Vanderwoude, Biological Sciences
Discovering Novel Genetic Markers of Antibiotic Resistance in Cystic Fibrosis Lung Infection of Pseudomonas Aeruginosa - Megan McSweeney, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
AptaTrigger: A Novel Biosensor Platform for Point-of-Care Diagnostics - Mohammed S. E. Sendi, Biomedical Engineering
Personalized Deep Brain Stimulation: A Window of Hope for Depression - Muhammad Saad Zia, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Mitigating Beam Alignment Errors in Millimeter-Wave Communications to Go Beyond 5G - Saad Javaid, Materials Science and Engineering
UltraVision and Time Manipulation: Technology Inspired Superpowers for Studying Cracks - Yifeng Shi, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Shape-Controlled Pd Nanocrystals: Surface Science and Catalytic Applications - Young Hee Yoon, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Understanding and Controlling Co-transport of Water and Organic Solvents in Microporous Carbon Molecular Sieve (CMS) Membranes