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A D V A N C E D

M A T E R I A L S

&

P R O C E S S E S | J A N U A R Y

2 0 1 6

7

ALL ABOARD THE

LITERARY TRAIN

Yale University, NewHaven, Conn.,

assistant French professor Morgane

Cadieu and her students created a

3D-printed train based on descriptions

from Emile Zola’s 1890 novel “La Bête

Humaine” (“The Beast Within”). To ac-

complish her project, Cadieu turned

to Yale’s Center for Engineering Inno-

vation & Design (CEID). She found that

creating a literary train would require

both tools and translation. A blueprint

of the model could be efficiently drawn

up using the CEID’s computer-aided

design software, at which point it could

be rapidly produced on the CEID’s

3D printers.

The final product turned out

more realistic than Cadieu anticipated.

“What we didn’t expect is that if you

look closely at trains from the end of

the 19th century, they really look sim-

ilar—the chimneys are this high,” she

says. “And yet Zola’s intense focus on

small parts of the train—the fog, the

sound, the light—could easily be inter-

preted another way, producing a lot

of different trains. For that reason, we

decided to connect this 3D train body

only through the 2D ‘fog’ of literary

descriptions in between the cars and

also above it.” In that sense, the model

train took on one more symbolic mean-

ing—as the connecting force between

Are you working with or have you

discovered a material or its properties

that exhibit OMG - Outrageous

Materials Goodness?

Send your submissions to

Julie Lucko at

julie.lucko@asminternational.org

.

OMG!

OUTRAGEOUS MATERIALS GOODNESS

Because Zola only described the

train engine as having two wheels,

the CEID team left the back wheels

off of their model as well.

Top view of the monument via the total

station surveying tool, captured by

placing a smartphone camera near the

eyepiece. Courtesy of NOAA.

literature and science.

For more infor-

mation: Morgane Cadieu, 203.436.2596,

morgane.cadieu@yale.edu

,

www.yale. edu.

WASHINGTON MONUMENT

RECEIVES NEW HEIGHT VALUE

Using new international measure-

ment standards and technology not

available in the past, the National Oce-

anic and Atmospheric Administration’s

National Geodetic Survey (NGS) has cal-

culated the official architectural height

of the Washington Monument to be

554 ft, 7.344 in.—a highly precise mea-

surement that makes it eligible for in-

clusion in official registers of the world’s

tallest structures. The measurement

was made using certification stan-

dards of the Council on Tall Buildings

and Urban Habitats and was finalized

in December 2014. Although the newly

established architectural height dif-

fers from the historical height of 555 ft,

5.125 in., neither the starting point nor

the so-called “standard deviation” used

for the original 1884 measurement is

known, making comparison of the two

measurements difficult. The new value

provides a baseline to determine if the

height of the monument is changing in

any way.

noaa.gov.

RESTORING CORPSES

WITH 3D PRINTING

The Mortuary Science Program

at Wayne State University, Detroit, re-

ceived a $10,000 grant to support its 3D

technology project from Service Corp.

International (SCI). Titled “3D Printing

in Restorative Art,” the initiative seeks

to develop an interactive learning mod-

ule for mortuary science students. The

goal is to create anatomical models

for laboratory learning and prosthet-

ics for body and feature restoration on

deceased individuals. The project illus-

trates how 3D technology can be used

in mortuary science education to meet

community needs. Specific objectives

include developing a set of core com-

petencies students need to successful-

ly reconstruct body parts, providing a

model for other schools.

For more in-

formation: 313.577.1202,

evely@wayne. edu, www.wayne.edu.

SCI’s Advancing Mortuary Science Educa-

tion grant program illustrates how 3D tech-

nology can be used inmortuary science

education tomeet community needs.