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(9,661 - 9,680 of 9,805)
Pages
- Title
- Bronzeville, Chicago, Illinois, 1961
- Date
- 1961
- Description
-
Color photograph depicting the Bronzeville neighborhood in 1961. Coverage includes the 3400 south blocks of Michigan Avenue, Indiana Avenue,...
Show moreColor photograph depicting the Bronzeville neighborhood in 1961. Coverage includes the 3400 south blocks of Michigan Avenue, Indiana Avenue, Prairie Avenue, and Calumet Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. One newer white commercial building at the left is the former Chicago Defender building. Photographer unknown.
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- Bronzeville photo, 1961
- Title
- Gospel Mission Baptist Church, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1945
- Creator
- Illinois Institute of Technology
- Date
- 1943-1948
- Description
-
Photograph of the front of the Gospel Mission Baptist Church. Date of photograph is unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
- Collection
- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Design on a Hill
- Creator
- Henry, Mary Dill, 1913-2009, Ziegler, William
- Description
-
Photograph of Design on a Hill (1940), a stone lithograph by Mary Dill Henry, completed as a part of her studies with Ray Bertrand....
Show morePhotograph of Design on a Hill (1940), a stone lithograph by Mary Dill Henry, completed as a part of her studies with Ray Bertrand. Handwritten inscription on verso: "Lithograph #2, 1940 Federal Art Project, litho pencil on stone. Ray Bertrand, San Francisco Art Project, was my teacher." Typewritten inscription on verso: "Mary Henry: Design on a Hill, 1940. Stone lithograph, 12" x 16". Courtesy of the artist, Freeland, WA. Photo: Wm. Ziegler." Photograph by William Ziegler. Date of photograph unknown.
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- Mary Dill Henry Papers, 1913-2021
- Title
- Federal Arts Project mosaic, Monterey, California
- Description
-
Photograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s,...
Show morePhotograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s, described on the inscription of a similar photograph as "Mary Dill's first mosaic for the Federal Art Project - the first governor's house in Monterey, Calif." Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown.
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- Mary Dill Henry Papers, 1913-2021
- Title
- Federal Arts Project mosaic, Monterey, California
- Description
-
Photograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s,...
Show morePhotograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s, described on the inscription of a similar photograph as "Mary Dill's first mosaic for the Federal Art Project - the first governor's house in Monterey, Calif." Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown.
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- Mary Dill Henry Papers, 1913-2021
- Title
- Federal Arts Project mosaic, Monterey, California
- Description
-
Photograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s,...
Show morePhotograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s, described on the inscription of a similar photograph as "Mary Dill's first mosaic for the Federal Art Project - the first governor's house in Monterey, Calif." Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown.
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- Mary Dill Henry Papers, 1913-2021
- Title
- Federal Arts Project mosaic, Monterey, California
- Description
-
Photograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s....
Show morePhotograph of a mural completed in Monterey, California as part of a the Federal Arts Project by Mary Dill, likely in the late 1930s. Inscription on verso: "Mary Dill's first mosaic for the Federal Art Project - the first governor's house in Monterey, Calif." Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown.
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- Mary Dill Henry Papers, 1913-2021
- Title
- Plate 5
- Creator
- Henry, Mary Dill, 1913-2009
- Date
- 1936-1939
- Description
-
Untitled ink drawing identified on recto as "Plate 5." Date of drawing is unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
- Collection
- Mary Dill Henry Papers, 1913-2021
- Title
- Ink Drawings, 1981
- Creator
- Henry, Mary Dill, 1913-2009
- Date
- 1981-02-17
- Description
-
Untitled ink drawings by Mary Henry. Inscription on verso reads "8' x 6' Feb 17 81" and also contains what appear to be mathematical...
Show moreUntitled ink drawings by Mary Henry. Inscription on verso reads "8' x 6' Feb 17 81" and also contains what appear to be mathematical calculations.
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- Mary Dill Henry Papers, 1913-2021
- Title
- LOCAL VISCOELASTIC PROPERTIES OF SOFT ANISOTROPIC FIBROUS TISSUE
- Creator
- Gallo, Nicolas Remy
- Date
- 2020
- Description
-
The current aging population, with more than 80 million "baby boomers", will present a steep medical challenge for our society in a...
Show moreThe current aging population, with more than 80 million "baby boomers", will present a steep medical challenge for our society in a foreseeable future. Half of the adults over 85 years old are predicted to be diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease by 2050. With healthcare cost reaching over 700 billion dollars in the United States, early detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other co-existing neurodegenerative diseases is crucial to improve the recovery odds in patients and to decrease individual care cost. This work seeks to tackle this problem by proposing a novel computational framework toward improving the measurement of shear visco-elastic properties of brain white matter (WM), which vary with age. These measurements practically represent the effective (average) response of many cells and are typically obtained by using rheology or elastography. Although the former is direct, the latter requires the solution of an inverse problem based on a priori mechanical tissue model. The mechanical anisotropy of WM has previously not been fully explored although many inconsistencies have been reported in brain MRE experiments. To account for these inconsistencies a transversely isotropic constitutive model for the brain WM is proposed to interpret prior experiments involving 7 young and 4 older healthy men. By employing a novel inversion scheme, we report the local variation of the effective transverse and axial shear moduli in two well aligned WM structures (corpus callosum: CC; and cortical spinal tract: CST) for both the young and old cohort of healthy subjects part of the study. This work reports statistically significant changes in local regional variation of the transverse modulus across the CC for the young cohort. In the older cohort, the trend was similar yet not statistically significant. A novel candidate biomarker, the shear anisotropy metric, defined as the ratio of the transverse and axial shear moduli, found statistically significant local regional variation across the CC but not in the CST. Healthy aging was observed to decrease both transverse and axial in both CC and CST, although the variation was significant only for the CC. Finally, in an effort to understand the cause of effective transverse mechanical properties variation in WM with aging, the connection between effective and intrinsic contribution of WM cellular constituents is established. The intrinsic mechanical contributions of axons and glial matrix are separated by fitting the estimates of the effective shear moduli to a microscopic composite fiber model of myelinated axons embedded in the glial matrix. This work provides a method to establish a baseline for healthy brain mechanical properties thus promising to increase the specificity of MRE toward early diagnosis of neurodegenerative diseases. Additional oscillating disc rheology experiments with decellularized porcine myocardium, and the fabrication of a stable heterogeneous phantom matching the mechanical, diffusional and electrical properties of the WM provide foundational knowledge for due development and validation of MRE methodologies employed in other tissues.
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- Title
- Students building a snowman, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, 1980s
- Creator
- Lightfoot, Robert M., III
- Date
- 1980-1989
- Description
-
Photograph of students building a snowman on present day Siegel Field, north of S.R. Crown Hall on the Illinois Tech campus. Date of...
Show morePhotograph of students building a snowman on present day Siegel Field, north of S.R. Crown Hall on the Illinois Tech campus. Date of photograph is unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Spring Thing tricycle race, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1968-1971
- Date
- 1968-1971
- Description
-
Photograph of the tricycle race during the Spring Thing. Spring Thing, sponsored by the Union Board, occurred during the fall semester,...
Show morePhotograph of the tricycle race during the Spring Thing. Spring Thing, sponsored by the Union Board, occurred during the fall semester, usually in October. The tricycle race, first held in 1968, was a highlight of the annual festivities. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph is unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Women's Hall (later Lewis Hall), Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1966
- Date
- 1965-1966
- Description
-
Photograph of Lewis Hall, designed by Mittelbusher & Tourtelot and constructed in 1966. The building is located at 70 East 33rd Street, and...
Show morePhotograph of Lewis Hall, designed by Mittelbusher & Tourtelot and constructed in 1966. The building is located at 70 East 33rd Street, and was known at the time of its construction as Women's Hall. Date of photograph is unknown. Date range listed is approximate. Photographer unknown.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Aqua Hawk
- Creator
- Keller, Keith
- Date
- 1977
- Description
-
Aqua Hawk documents the creation of a concrete canoe by Civil Engineering students at Illinois Institute of Technology for a race sponsored by...
Show moreAqua Hawk documents the creation of a concrete canoe by Civil Engineering students at Illinois Institute of Technology for a race sponsored by the American Concrete Institute. The film shows the different stages of the construction of the canoe, named the Aqua Hawk, and its eventual competition at a regional race held near Champaign, Illinois on April 24, 1976. Directed by Illinois Tech student Keith Keller, the film was narrated by Institute of Design instructor Charles Dee Sharp.
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- Office of Marketing and Communications films, 1958-1988
- Title
- My IIT
- Creator
- Namburi, Kartheeka
- Date
- 2024
- Description
-
Master's Project focused on developing a user-friendly mobile application for Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT).
- Title
- Laser Powder Bed Fusion Of Cost-Effective Non-Spherical Ti-6Al-4V Powder
- Creator
- Asherloo, Mohammadreza
- Date
- 2023
- Description
-
This comprehensive research delves into the intricate dynamics of Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) of Ti-6Al-4V powders, emphasizing the...
Show moreThis comprehensive research delves into the intricate dynamics of Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) of Ti-6Al-4V powders, emphasizing the potential of non-spherical, hydride-dehydride (HDH) powders as a cost-efficient alternative to traditional spherical powders. The study systematically explores the interplay between powder morphology, granulometry, and various post-processing treatments in shaping the resultant microstructure, porosity, and mechanical properties of L-PBF fabricated Ti-6Al-4V components.Initial investigations focused on the flowability, packing density, and resultant density of L-PBF parts using HDH powders with varying size distributions. Through meticulous optimization of laser parameters, parts with a relative density exceeding 99.5% were achieved, even at production rates 1.5–2 times higher than conventional LPBF processes. Dynamic synchrotron X-ray imaging provided insights into laser-powder interactions, revealing key mechanisms of porosity formation associated with HDH powders. Further microstructural examinations highlighted the formation of columnar β grains with acicular α/α′ phases in the as-built condition. Mechanical tests, including fatigue assessments under fully-reversed tension-compression conditions, revealed the critical role of surface roughness in fatigue performance. Notably, mechanical grinding significantly improved fatigue strength, especially in the high cycle fatigue region, by eliminating surface micro-notches. X-ray diffraction analyses further elucidated the stress and micro-strain profiles, offering insights into the material's deformation mechanisms. A pivotal discovery was the presence of α/α′ on prior β/β grain boundaries, challenging the prevailing notion that high cooling rates in L-PBF preclude β/β grain boundary variant selection. Electron backscatter diffraction and synchrotron X-ray imaging illuminated the role of powder characteristics in locally modulating cooling rates, leading to β/β grain boundary α′ lath growth. Lastly, the research underscored the multifaceted interdependencies among contouring, powder granulometry, Hot Isostatic Pressing (HIP), and mechanical surface treatments. A pronounced increase in sub-surface porosities was identified when contouring was combined with fine powder granulometry. However, post-HIP treatments induced a phase transformation from martensitic α′ to a basket-weave α+β microstructure, enhancing the material's fatigue resistance to levels comparable to wrought Ti-6Al-4V. In summation, this doctoral research offers a holistic understanding of the L-PBF process for Ti-6Al-4V, emphasizing the viability of non-spherical HDH powders and providing a roadmap for parameter optimization, defect minimization, and mechanical property enhancement in L-PBF-fabricated Ti-6Al-4V structures.
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- Title
- Case Study: A Comparison of Pedagogical Content Knowledge Between Coaches and Coaches/Mentees
- Creator
- Barone, Ana MargaritaSalinas
- Date
- 2024
- Description
-
This multiple case study dissertation aimed to examine one of the domains of pedagogical content knowledge, knowledge of content and students,...
Show moreThis multiple case study dissertation aimed to examine one of the domains of pedagogical content knowledge, knowledge of content and students, between different types of elementary coaches and between coach and their respective collaborating teachers. It also investigated the impact a coaches’ background experiences have on the dynamic between coaches and teachers and the perceptions' teacher have on the effectiveness of coaching. The theoretical framework used in this qualitative study was Ball, Thames, and Phelps’ (2008) definition of PCK. Data was collected from six coaches–four instructional coaches and two math coaches–and eleven k-5th grade teachers. Data collection involved a survey, LMT assessment, and semi-structured interviews, and a thematic analysis method was conducted. The findings from the cross-case analysis resulted in ten themes, with the majority having multiple categories. One finding to one of the research questions was that there were no differences in knowledge of content and students between mathematics coaches and general instructional coaches, but other areas to further investigate emerged. Another finding was that coaches were either within the same capacity as their respective teachers or had extra knowledge of content and students. Although the majority of the coaches’ knowledge of content and students was at a higher level according to their LMT score, it does not necessarily mean that coaches are working with teachers in improving knowledge of content and students. In addition, more research is recommended in creating a pedagogical content knowledge instrument that is specific for coaches.
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- Title
- Characterization of Radiation Damage Effects in High-Energy Neutrino Target Graphite using Low-Energy Ions
- Creator
- Burleigh, Abraham C.
- Date
- 2023
- Description
-
Exposure of graphite targets to high intensity proton beams at neutrino production facilities causes changes in the target material that can...
Show moreExposure of graphite targets to high intensity proton beams at neutrino production facilities causes changes in the target material that can result in a shortened operation lifetime. The dominant factors in this process are currently thought to be mechanical in nature resulting primarily from microstructural effects that lead to thermal and structural changes in bulk material properties. As currently planned beam facilities with increased proton energy and intensity begin to come online it will be important to thoroughly understand these processes, and ideally to be able to predict the effects of new beam designs on target properties. Direct analysis of targets exposed to existing high-energy proton beams is complicated by several factors, such as very limited access to proton beam facilities, high associated costs, irradiation times on the order of months, and the resulting radioactivity of irradiated samples that requires special facilities for post-irradiation examination. Much of the existing literature concerning irradiation damage in graphite has been focused on the needs of the nuclear engineering community, however high-energy proton targets operate in a much different environment. In comparison to graphite irradiated in a nuclear reactor, graphite used in proton beam targets receives a higher dose rate, have greater gas production, and experience short irradiation pulses as opposed to continuous irradiation. Low-energy ion irradiation offers a method of inducing similar levels of radiation damage to high-energy protons while avoiding many of the difficulties and limitations associated with high-energy proton beams and the corresponding activated specimen testing. My research described in this thesis focused on investigating how low-energy ion irradiation could be used to induce the same or similar types of microstructural alteration and mechanical property degradation as that seen in high-energy neutrino production target graphites by varying damage levels and irradiation temperatures prior to post-irradiation characterization.
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- Title
- Nanopore sensing for environmental and biomarker analysis
- Creator
- Arora, Pearl
- Date
- 2024
- Description
-
Nanopore stochastic sensing is a powerful analytical tool for detecting target molecules through a nanoscale pore. The analyte and electrolyte...
Show moreNanopore stochastic sensing is a powerful analytical tool for detecting target molecules through a nanoscale pore. The analyte and electrolyte ions are subjected to a voltage bias which drives them to translocate through the nanopore, resulting in disruptions in the ionic current. These disruptions are translated to blockage events which can serve as a signature of the analyte. Owing to its unique features of single-molecule and label-free sensing, nanopore technique has been exploited in a wide array of applications such as detection of metal ions, proteins, DNA, microRNA, toxic agents etc. In this dissertation, projects showcasing nanopore’s sensing capability of different biomarkers and in the detection of a wide range of target molecules based on non-covalent interactions are presented. Particularly in the first two projects, nanopore detection of ferric ions relevant to environmental regulation as well as a biomarker for human health and a miRNA-based biomarker for oral cancer and oral related diseases are summarized. Ferric ions, which are benign if present in balanced quantities but can be toxic otherwise, are detected by using an engineered multifunctional nanopore and a chelating organophosphonic acid ligand. The chelate complex formed after ferric ions bind to ligand gives significantly different event signatures than the free ligand in the solution enabling ferric ion detection. Even in the presence of interfering ions, the ferric ions could be recognized easily because of the conformational changes brought in the nanopore lumen by the interaction of the interfering metal ions with the His-tags of the nanopore which in turn resulted in variations in the characteristics of blocking events. In the second project, miR31, an oral cancer biomarker, is selectively detected with the help of an engineered nanopore, and a DNA based probe. Several probes with variations in length, composition and position of the overhangs or probes with no overhangs were compared and studied as the probes play a crucial role in capturing the target of interest with high specificity. Our strategically designed probe emerged as the most effective in capturing the target even in presence of large background from human saliva samples and enhanced the sensitivity of the system. In the first two projects, nanopores are utilized for selective and specific detection of certain target molecules. However, in order to analyze diverse range of analytes, numerous sensing systems have to be constructed which can be a time-consuming and challenging task. To circumvent this limitation, in the third project, diverse recognition sites based on various non-covalent interactions are incorporated into the α-hemolysin protein pore to achieve detection of not just a single analyte but broad category of molecules such as cations, anions, aromatic and hydrophobic compounds.
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