Rate of Change Podcast

Dedicated to the ingenious ways engineers are solving society’s toughest problems

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Season 5

episode art: tv with qbit
3/19Podcast

Pop Quantum

The word “quantum” is quickly creeping into the lexicon of American culture. But what does it actually mean? And what does Chris Nolan get right that Marvel gets wrong? Members of the Duke Quantum Center have answers.

episode art with university home icon
4/16Podcast

A Blue Devil Family

When Becky Simmons first got to Duke in the 1990s, she wouldn’t have guessed it then, but a future awaited her that included graduate school, a husband, two daughters, professorship and ties that would bind them all to Duke for decades.

Season 4

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2/17Podcast

The Inescapable Need for Freedom

MEMS professor Adrian Bejan escaped through the Iron Curtain to pursue his dreams. Listen to discover how his freedom led him to formulate constructal theory, which connects physics to evolution through the freedom of change.

podcast cover art: brain with lightning bolt and speech bubbles
3/14Podcast

Resonance

She’s an analyst. He’s an algebrist. She loves displays of unbridled creativity; he has journaled every day for thirty years. Between the two of them, Duke power couple Ingrid Daubechies and Robert Calderbank have changed the way society shares and processes information.

podcast cover art: microscope
3/30Podcast

Multiplying Microscopes

Today, researchers use a variety of imaging techniques to visualize and analyze biological systems, but there are limits to how much—and how well—these tools can see. But Duke BME’s Roarke Horstmeyer and his team are creating new microscopes and imaging algorithms to capture biomedical images at never-before-seen scales.

podcast cover art: magnifying glass and bacteria
4/12Podcast

What Makes a Happy Community?

Duke CEE faculty member Andrew Jones investigates how and where bacterial communities thrive in the built environment—and imagines a future water smart grid that’s accessible to everyone.

Season 3

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10/5Podcast

Turning Photons into Soundwaves

Duke Biomedical Engineering professor Junjie Yao has helped pioneer the field of photoacoustic imaging, which uses light and sound to create detailed and informative biological images of everything from a single cell to an entire body.

podcast cover art: bone breaking
11/17Podcast

Reversing Bone Loss Due to Osteoporosis

Current drugs for osteoporosis can only slow or stop progression of bone loss. What’s gone is gone. Duke University Professor Shyni Varghese has built a new molecule that rebuilds bone—and may transform osteoporosis treatment.

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11/30Podcast

The Chemical Detective

What’s in our drinking water? Duke professor of civil and environmental engineering Lee Ferguson uses non-targeted analysis to gather clues about chemical contaminants, making it possible to identify them and trace them back to their points of origin.

Season 2

podcast cover art: bridge over water
9/9Podcast

Of Potholes and Budget Holes

A conversation with Henry Petroski on the current state of disrepair of America’s roads and bridges, why fixing them may require unpopular politics, and what the future might hold for their improvement

podcast cover art: toilet
9/17Podcast

Reclaiming Water from Waste

Washing our hands with soap and running water for at least twenty seconds helps prevent the spread of pathogens. For areas of the world where water is scarce, ECE faculty member Brian Stoner and his colleagues at WaSH-AID are reclaiming usable water from an unlikely source.

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10/1Podcast

Safe Hygiene for Everyone, Period

Women and girls* are disproportionately affected when access to safely managed sanitation is lacking. Duke ECE engineer Sonia Grego wants to change that.

podcast cover art: smart watch with heart rate
10/13Podcast

The Blind Spots in Our Biomedical Data

Between measuring our activity levels, heart rate and sleeping schedules, today’s smart watches seem to give us a better picture of our overall health. Duke BME’s Jessilyn Dunn explores the endless potential—and hidden limitations—of this data.

podcast cover art: test tube and swab
10/19Podcast

How to Catch COVID-19

If the last year has shown us anything, it’s that fast and accurate diagnostic tests are key for helping to control the spread of a dangerous disease. In this episode, BME’s Ashutosh Chilkoti and his PhD students explain how the lab’s signature diagnostic platform is being modified to quickly and accurately detect COVID-19.

podcast cover art: mixing bowl and whisk
11/19Podcast

In the Kitchen with NanoMine

If discovering and designing next-gen materials is like cooking, Duke engineer Cate Brinson is writing the materials cookbook.

Season 1

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8/28Podcast

Rate of Change Podcast Introduction

Rate of Change is a new podcast from Duke Engineering, dedicated to the ingenious ways that engineers are solving society’s toughest problems.

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8/30Podcast

Air Quality, Quick and Dirty

Air pollution degrades everything from cultural heritage sites like the Taj Mahal, to solar energy production. Duke civil and environmental engineering professor Mike Bergin is trying to fill in some of the knowledge gaps about what the pollution is and where it comes from, to better manage its effects.

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8/30Podcast

End Transmission

Duke professor David Katz works at the intersection of biomedical engineering and reproductive health. His research informs efforts to prevent the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases—most notably human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV.

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8/30Podcast

Opening the Black Box

Cynthia Rudin is a professor of computer science and electrical and computer engineering at Duke University, and an outspoken critic of using black box algorithms for high-stakes decisions.

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8/30Podcast

Scratch-Made Muscle

Duke professor of biomedical engineering Nenad Bursac is learning how muscles can recover from injury, by using stem cells to create new muscles from scratch.

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8/30Podcast

The World’s Coolest T-Shirt

Materials engineer Po-Chun Hsu is developing textiles that heat and cool at the personal level—a scaled-back approach to climate control that could help curb emissions in the U.S.