Dr. Hubler received an NSF Career Award for her proposal "Mechanical Modeling of Living Building Materials for Structural Applications" (/mse/2022/03/22/hubler-earns-nsf-career-award-advance-living-building-materials)
Ph.D. student Naiara Rodrigues and Dr. Hubler are in the process of developing an application to test concrete on construction sites (/engineering/2022/02/11/seed-grant-opens-research-future-construction-materials-site-tools)
Dr. Hubler was selected as a Faculty Fellow through the Research & Innovation Office at the University of Colorado Boulder
Publication of "Experimental Study on Nanoparticle Injection by Using a Lab-scale Wellbore System” in Cement and Concrete Composites
2021
Dr. Hubler is working with Al Weimer and others on repurposing carbon products from fuel sources into concrete bricks in hopes to reduce pollution and create stronger, more long-lasting materials (/mse/2021/08/25/carbon-capture-doe-funded-projects-may-lead-more-durable-concrete-materials)
Publication of “Working with Randomness: A Perspective on Using Spatial Statistics to Engineer the Mechanics of Heterogenous Materials” in Mechanics Research Communications
Awarded Prometheus Materials/SOM grant, "Algae-grown Engineered Living Reinforced Concrete"
Seminar on "Using Spatial Statistics to Engineer the Mechanics of Heterogenous Materials" at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Publication of “Experimental Study on Nanoparticle Injection Technology for Remediating Leaks of Gas Storage and Transportation” in Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering
DARPA grant, "Programmable Resurrection of Materials Engineered To Heal Exponentially Using Switches" extended funding to 2023
Sannidhya Gosh graduated
Publication of "Numerical Modeling of the Injection of Nanoparticles in Saturated Cementitious Material by Electromigration” in Journal of Engineering Mechanics
Awarded ARPA-E grant, "Testing and Analysis of Pipeline Encapsulation Technologies"
Publication of "Engineering Living Building Materials (LBMs) towards Enhanced Bacterial Viability and Mechanical Properties” in iScience