Electrical and Computer Engineering

  • ECpE makes Fortune’s best cybersecurity master’s degree list

    A way to address the talent gap in expertise is with master’s degree programs. To help guide those people looking to launch their career in this fast-growing space, Fortune has ranked the top in-person master’s degree programs in cybersecurity in 2023. Read More

  • A researcher examines crop plants
    Iowa State selected for Foundational Agrivoltaic Research for Megawatt Scale (FARMS) funding program

    The Foundational Agrivoltaic Research for Megawatt Scale (FARMS) funding program examines how agrivoltaics can provide new economic opportunities to farmers, rural communities, and the solar industry. Read More

  • Iowa State University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
    Zachary Bunch: Outstanding senior in cyber security engineering

    Zachary Bunch is the fall 2022 outstanding senior in cyber security engineering. Read More

  • Lucas Heimer, outstanding senior in electrical engineering, with W. Samuel Easterling, James L. and Katherine S. Melsa Dean of Engineering.
    Lucas Heimer: Outstanding senior in electrical engineering

    Lucas Heimer is the fall 2022 outstanding senior in electrical engineering. Read More

  • Tyler Rebischke, outstanding senior in computer engineering, with W. Samuel Easterling, James L. and Katherine S. Melsa Dean of Engineering.
    Tyler Rebischke: Outstanding senior in computer engineering

    Tyler Rebischke is the fall 2022 outstanding senior in computer engineering. Read More

  • Andrew Deick, outstanding senior in software engineering, with W. Samuel Easterling, James L. and Katherine S. Melsa Dean of Engineering.
    Andrew Deick: Outstanding senior in software engineering

    Andrew Deick is the fall 2022 outstanding senior in software engineering. Read More

  • Anna Hackbarth holds a sousaphone
    What does community sound like? For Anna Hackbarth, it’s marching band music

    "When I heard the ISU Cyclone Marching Band practicing during my first tour of campus, I just immediately fell in love. I knew I wanted to come to Iowa State and be in the band and be a part of all of it. And, lucky for me, because I always planned to major in engineering, Iowa State is a great band school and a great engineering school." Read More

  • MRC fosters cutting-edge research and provides state-of-the-art equipment

    Liang Dong, Vikram Dalal Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering was named the director of the Microelectronics Research Center (MRC) in 2022. The MRC is a multi-disciplinary center focusing on the study of semiconductor materials, devices, and applications. The research conducted at the MRC includes microelectronics, photonics, compound semiconductors, nanomaterials, sensors, and microelectromechanical systems. The Center is utilized by research groups across the campus, industry specialists, and students. “The Center provides our students with ampler opportunities for fabricating micro- and nanodevices. Our researchers have full access to a range of tools. The fabrication and characterization capacity we have is the foundation that our academic and industry communities need to innovate and scale in the micro- and nano-world,” Dong said, “The Center also provides an environment that fosters innovation and collaboration between researchers. We are working towards integrating expertise and strengths to initiate and develop new research activities and to succeed.” One of Dong’s core research areas is in sensors. He has developed a suite of agricultural sensors to detect plant diseases, monitor their health status, and quantify water and fertilizer use efficiencies of crops. These devices are just some examples of research that utilizes the MRC, which houses a lot of state-of-the-art equipment to use. This includes a 3D-nano-printer. This printer, worth more than half a million dollars, can print fine structures of less than one hundredth the size of human hair. This piece of equipment has a wide array of applications in low-cost sensors, micro-optics, and smart nanomaterials and devices. Read More

  • Helping law enforcement hunt evil

    Guan serves as the Cyber Forensic Coordinator for the Center for Statistic and Applications in Forensic Evidence (CSAFE). It was through CSAFE that Guan and his team developed EviHunter. This software can analyze a smart phone’s apps for evidence relating to a crime, and it is automatic and can speed up the investigation process by shortening the time to only 20-30 minutes per device. Read More

  • Samarjit Das
    Samarjit Das named Cyclone Engineering’s 2022 Young Alumni award winner

    Samarjit Das ('10 PhD electrical engineering) is the 2022 recipient of Cyclone Engineering's Young Alumni Award. Read More

  • Meet the new ECpE faculty member: Cheng Wang

    Starting this fall, Cheng Wang is a new professor for the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECpE). Wang brings extensive experience and research to the department. The following Q and A is a chance to get to know Wang as the semester begins. Read More

  • Testing hybrid, soft/hard nanocarriers to deliver drugs to the brain

    Rizia Bardhan made a fist with one hand then covered it with her other hand, like a baseball player catching a ball in the web of a fielder’s glove. The fist represents a special nanocarrier filled with medicine, said the Iowa State University associate professor of chemical and biological engineering. The other hand represents a cell working out whether to catch that nanoparticle then take it, drugs and all, across its protective membrane into its interior. Read More

  • Instructor stands in computer classroom
    Cyber informed thinking

    A new cybersecurity faculty fellows program has been created within the College of Engineering to equip students with cybersecurity concepts.  An inaugural cohort of nine engineering faculty members spans across several departments in the college. Read More

  • The value of an engineering education

    “The benefit of an engineering education is that, in addition to the specific subject matter, you learn the habits of self-study that will carry you through your career. In engineering you are always having to learn new material along the way, which is a very valuable skill,” said Stephen Mosher (’70 elec engr). Read More

  • Photo of all 18 Kiewit Scholars standing
    Iowa State College of Engineering selects first Kiewit Scholars Program cohort

    AMES, Iowa – This spring, Iowa State University’s Kiewit Scholars Program selected 18 students for the inaugural cohort for the Kiewit Scholars Program at Iowa State. This first group of scholars includes nine incoming freshmen and nine currently enrolled Iowa State students. Read More