Engineers from the University of Sydney (USYD), Australia and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) are collaborating on research in diverse areas ranging from artificial intelligence (AI) and food technology to clean energy and waste management.
The faculty-to-faculty partnership will see the USYD’s Faculty of Engineering and Information Technologies explore new research opportunities with NTU Singapore’s College of Engineering.
Faculty of Engineering and IT Interim Dean Professor Kim Rasmussen and engineering researchers from Sydney visited NTU last month to discuss collaborative research opportunities.
“This is the Faculty of Engineering and IT’s first strategic partnership with a Singaporean institution and we are delighted to be joining forces with one of the world’s largest and best-known engineering colleges,” Rasmussen said.
“We are very proud of the fact that a number of our academic staff have worked at or with NTU in the past, and we look forward to continuing to work together on initiatives that will be mutually beneficial to researchers at both institutions.”
USYD Vice-Chancellor and Principal Dr Michael Spence also welcomed the new partnership.
“Higher education is inherently global, and universities contribute through networks and partnerships with collaborators and colleagues around the world. This new partnership will help our engineering researchers make a difference, locally and globally,” he said.
Professor Louis Phee, Acting Dean, College of Engineering at NTU Singapore,said: “With two-thirds of the world’s population expected to be living in cities by 2045, this collaboration aims to develop sustainable technologies that will shape smart cities of the future.
“The University of Sydney is known for its research in areas such as civil and structural engineering. Together with NTU, which is globally recognised for its strengths in engineering and AI, this partnership will also open new doors in translational research and set sail into new frontiers of technological innovation.”
A potential project for collaboration is the development of an autonomous wall-climbing robot that is capable of welding large engineering structures, and that can conduct inspections and clean the surfaces of large engineering structures.
The University of Sydney and NTU Singapore also aim to build on their existing research collaboration in food technologies, including fermentation technology and intelligent packaging.
In addition, the partners plan to explore collaboration opportunities in the areas of:
- Chemical engineering, with a focus on materials
- Civil engineering, with a focus on materials, concrete and steel
- Cloud computing, IoT and data science
- Membrane technology
- Photonics and telecommunications and networks
- Transport engineering
- Space engineering
- Robotics.
Over the longer term, they will also explore other collaborative pursuits which may include inter-country visits, guest lectures and workshops for students, and opportunities for PhD students from both institutions to work on joint projects.