UMD departments and the peer-institution network
CECD is housed in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the A. James Clark School of Engineering. This page documents the Center's UMD home, its educational programs in Energetic Concepts, partnerships with the College of Southern Maryland and the Do Good Institute, and the international university network represented at CECD symposia.
College of Southern Maryland.
CECD's MOU with CSM dates to 2004, alongside the Southern Maryland Initiative for Energetic Capability Development. The biennial National Capital Region Energetics Symposium has been held at CSM's La Plata campus, including the 2011 edition with 150 participants and a keynote from Dr. Arun Seraphin of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
In Spring 2017, CECD funded a CSM social-entrepreneurship course taught by Thomas Luginbill, Director of the CSM Entrepreneur and Innovation Institute. CECD covered student tuition, fees, and textbooks; the NEILOM Foundation supplied a $1,500 first-place and $500 second-place prize pool. The Entrepreneurship in Southern Maryland Challenge final on May 11, 2017 awarded first place to Kaelyn Ching and Jordan Johnson for their work with Farming4Hunger; second to Caryn Fossile, Jeremy Forris, and Jordon Gandee for a public-service announcement video on the Southern Maryland Center for Independent Living.
More than $800,000 in free CECD-supported courses for NAVSEA Indian Head personnel has been delivered at CSM and UMD over the life of the partnership.
UMD School of Public Policy
Do Good Institute.
CECD's Engineering for Social Change course was built in collaboration with Prof. Robert T. Grimm, Jr., inaugural Levenson Family Chair in Philanthropy and Nonprofit Leadership and founding Director of the Do Good Institute.
Anand and Hazelwood published Engineering for Social Change Revisited in 2023, deposited in the UMD DRUM repository. Co-instruction at the inception of the course came from Jennifer Littlefield, then Director of College Park Scholars Public Leadership.
Munich
Energetic Materials Synthesis Laboratory, LMU Munich.
Prof. Thomas M. Klapötke, Chair of Inorganic Chemistry at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, joined CECD as a Visiting Professor on February 1, 2009.
Klapötke's laboratory has synthesized roughly 1,000 new molecules including more than 100 new energetic materials. He has worked alongside NSWC Indian Head, the Army Research Laboratory, the Energetics Technology Center, and CECD on synthesis and characterization of advanced energetics, including the 2011 Synthesis of Advanced Energetic Materials workshop co-hosted with James Short and David Chavez of Los Alamos.
Convenings
Institutions represented at CECD symposia.
2010
Hong Kong Workshop
Co-hosted with City University of Hong Kong. US delegation led by Anand: Short, Pecht, Zachariah, Eichhorn, Bruck, Kavetsky (ETC). Chinese participants from CAEP Mianyang, Beijing Institute of Technology, and Nanjing UST. Seoul National University from Korea.
2011
Synthesis of Advanced Energetic Materials
Co-hosted with LMU Munich (Klapötke) and Los Alamos National Laboratory (Chavez). Participants from the United States, Sweden, France, Germany, Russia, and the Czech Republic.
2011
NCRES at CSM La Plata
150 participants. Speakers from NSWC IH, ARL, Penn State, BAE Systems, Aerojet, Pacific Scientific, Digital Solid State Propulsion. Keynote by Dr. Arun Seraphin, White House OSTP.
2012
Strategic Materials Symposium
David Cammarota (OSD), Andy Davis (MolyCorp), Greg Jackson (CECD), Chris Guzy (Ballard Power), Robert Moore (Virginia Tech), Kamen Nechev (Saft Batteries).
2013
Critical Materials Workshop
Held at Argonne National Laboratory, June 6–7, 2013. Participants from 12 states and DC.
2014
Autonomy Symposium
Anand, Balachandran, Hazelwood, Short, Firebaugh, and UMD Clark School Dean Darryll Pines, with Delegate John Bohanan.
2016
Data-Driven Design Symposium
Organized by Prof. Mark Fuge. Speakers included Mary Cummings of Duke and Richard Malak of NSF.
Full symposium archive on the symposia page.