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TCE Faculty Awarded AI TechX Seed Funding

Tickle College of Engineering faculty members are involved in seven of the nine projects that will receive the first round of funding from AI TechX, a new initiative created by the University of Tennessee to empower Tennessee communities and industry partners to adopt artificial intelligence technologies that enable high-quality job creation.

AI TechX was launched in March with a mission of advancing AI research and innovation; preparing, upskilling, and reskilling the workforce; and supporting the AI-enabled businesses that will define Tennessee’s future.

“Our goal is to de-risk AI adoption, especially for those companies, by providing access to talent, solutions, and trusted university collaboration,” said Vasileios Maroulas, associate vice chancellor and director of AI Tennessee. “This isn’t about theory. AI TechX is about moving AI off the whiteboard and into the workflow.”

The first round of seed funding awarded $60,000 to each project. Each winning team included both UT researchers and industry and community partners to accelerate adoption of AI across a variety of disciplines. More than 30 faculty members submitted applications for the first round of funding.

The TCE faculty that received funding are:

  • A team led by Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering Subhadeep Chakraborty and Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Bradley Jared, in partnership with the Edison Welding Institute, a nonprofit advancing manufacturing through engineering and innovation, and One-Off Robotics, a Chattanooga-based robotic metal additive and subtractive equipment integrator, will apply AI to modeling, control, optimization, and uncertainty quantification to optimize efficiency of additive manufacturing processes.
  • A team led by Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering Jim Ostrowski, in partnership with defense technology firm Vibrint, will harness AI and quantum computing technologies in geospatial intelligence for defense applications.
  • A team of researchers and students led by Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Hector Santos-Villalobos in partnership with UT Athletics and the Joe Gibbs Human Performance Institute, a biomechanical engineering research facility, will develop AI-driven performance analytics for the UT football team to reduce player injuries.
  • A team led by Airton Kohls, a research associate in UT’s Center for Transportation Research, in partnership with the City of Knoxville and local technology company Cubic, will use AI and sensor technologies to improve pedestrian safety at signalized intersections, focusing on streets adjacent to UT’s campus. 
  • A team led by Assistant Professor of EECS Fnu Suya, in partnership with Cisco’s Advanced Security Initiatives Group, will develop and explore AI technologies and methodologies to inform the company’s network cybersecurity solutions.
  • A team led by Assistant Professor of EECS Sai Swaminathan, in partnership with Volkswagen Group of America, will work with VW’s North American manufacturing facility located in Chattanooga to develop AI systems and methodologies for real-time quality inspection on their production lines.
  • A team led by Dongarra Professor of High-Performance Computing Michela Taufer, in partnership with a global leader in cutting-edge AI and high-performance computing technologies, will accelerate performance of large language models and other AI tools for real-world impact in global irrigation mapping, environmental and earth sciences, and molecular dynamics.

Contact

Rhiannon Potkey (rpotkey@utk.edu)