Partnership with Habitat for Humanity Lays Solid Foundation for New Sustainable Wood Products Course

NC State students salvage wood from home deconstructionWorking with Habitat for Humanity deconstructing homes is just the first step for students in a new interdisciplinary course offered this Fall by the Department of Wood and Paper Science at NC State. The main objective of WPS491/"Wood as A Sustainable Material" is to introduce the ideas and concepts of sustainability as it relates to wood and wood products manufacturing, including using waste wood for value added products and energy.

As part of their coursework the students tour historic homes and green buildings and collaborate with Habitat for Humanity to deconstruct homes. The deconstructed wood (lumber) is brought to the Hodges Wood Products Lab at NC State where the students develop value-added products, like mouldings, from the wood. Once produced to Habitat's specifications, the value-added projects will be used on Habitat homes under construction. 

NC State wood products students salvage roofing boards from a home being deconstructed by Habitat for HumanityAccording to course professor Sudipta Dasmohapatra, the students will gain a broad perspective of sustainability and green principles; become familar with various applications of wood as a sustainable and renewable material; learn about wood construction and deconstruction concepts like moisture retention, drying, nailing and finishing; and develop an understanding of life cycle analysis and certification – all while providing a service to the community.

Solving the Period Problem: Researchers Develop Sanitary Pads from Local Organic Materials

NC State News Release – October 5, 2009

Contact:  Caroline Barnhill, News Services – 919.515.6251

Prototype of sanitary pad made from banana stem fibers produced at NC State UniversityFor most American women, their “time of the month” is seen as a hindrance to daily life. In impoverished and developing countries, however, monthly periods are a major cause for concern among women. The lack of affordable, quality sanitary pads results in females missing up to 50 days of school annually – thereby compromising their educational and professional potential. Researchers at North Carolina State University are helping to combat the problem by designing affordable pads made from natural, available materials that will allow for local production and sale.

“This is the kind of project I’ve wanted to be involved with for a long time – using my knowledge of textiles and the sciences to make a real impact in the underserved parts of the world,” says Dr. Marian McCord, associate professor of textile engineering chemistry, science and biomedical engineering at NC State. McCord was contacted by Sustainable Health Enterprises (SHE), a social enterprise dedicated to developing a franchise model led by young women to manufacture and distribute affordable, high-quality and environmentally friendly sanitary pads in underserved parts of the world.

Former President Bill Clinton recently named the SHE project one of the “commitments to action” at the Clinton Global Initiative’s annual meeting in September. Established in 2005, the Clinton Global Initiative brings together a community of global leaders to devise and implement innovative solutions to some of the world’s most pressing challenges.

A prototype of the sanitary pad, produced by textile engineering student David W. Allen, is made from banana stem fibers. McCord and colleagues across NC State are using their knowledge in areas such as nonwovens, wood and paper science, and medical textiles to develop a sanitary pad from materials readily available in local areas – such as the fiber from banana stems in Rwanda. The pads will be sold by community health workers for 30 percent less than the available brand.

“In some of these areas of Africa, a month’s supply of imported sanitary pads cost more than a day’s worth of wages. The donations they receive from individuals help, but they simply are not a long-term solution to the problem,” says Elizabeth Scharpf, founder and CEO of SHE. “Our goal is to create affordable pads that are able to be easily manufactured for a low cost at the local level – and the research being conducted at NC State helps us do that.”

Researchers in the Department of Wood and Paper Science at NC StateDrs. Lucian Lucia, Medwick Byrd and Hasan Jameel – took  banana stem fibers, which are easily accessible in Rwanda, and put them through a series of chemical treatments and mechanical actions in order to change their composition from coarse, waxy fibers into soft, billowy materials that are more amenable to absorbing liquid. Students in a textile engineering senior design course, led by Dr. Russell Gorga, associate professor of textile engineering, then incorporated the material into comfortable, effective and environmentally benign covers to create the prototypes currently under evaluation. The final prototype was produced by David W. Allen, a senior in textile engineering at NC State.

“The idea behind our research was to keep this process extremely simple – we employed materials that were cheap and easy to work with,” Lucia says. “In order for this project to be successful, it was imperative that the process could be replicated in other parts of the world – and that the average person, not necessarily a scientist, could create these sanitary pads. Our part in this important project was to show that turning banana stem fiber into an absorbent material is possible – and we’re very pleased that was exactly what we were able to do.”

“Our hope is that through this research, we’ll take a step toward improving the lives of millions of impoverished women in Rwanda, and perhaps all of Africa,” McCord says. “This project is just one of many examples of how a university without a medical school like NC State can have a major impact on global health.”

Wood & Paper Science's Jameel Honored with Teaching Award

News Release – September 28, 2009

Dr. Hasan Jameel NC State Dept of Wood and Paper ScienceDr. Hasan Jameel, Ellis Signe Olssen Professor of Chemical Engineering in the Department of Wood & Paper Science at North Carolina State University, has been selected by the College of Natural Resources to receive the Board of Governor's College Award for Excellence in Teaching.  Along with a cash award and recognition at a campus-wide event in the Spring, Jameel will be a nominee for the University Board of Governor's Award.

The Board of Governors Awards for Excellence in Teaching were created in 1994 to underscore the importance of teaching and to encourage, recognize, and reward outstanding teaching. Nominees for the award must be tenured professors who have spent at least seven years at the nominating institutions and who have “demonstrated excellent or exceptional teaching ability over a sustained period of time.”

Jameel joined the NC State Department of Wood & Paper Science in 1987 following a career with International Paper. He has received numerous honors and awards for his work, including recognition as NCSU Outstanding Teacher (1990 and 2005), NCSU Alumni Distinguished Professor (1999), and NCSU Outstanding Advisor (2006). In 2005 Dr. Jameel received the Johan C.F.C. Richter Prize from the TAPPI Pulp Manufacture Division. Other TAPPI honors include the David Wetherhorn Award (1994), TAPPI Outstanding Instructor (1995) and the Wayne Carr Best Paper Award (2002). 

He has been a TAPPI Member since 1987 and has been involved with several Divisions and Local Sections. Dr. Jameel is also a Fellow of the International Academy of Wood Science, TAPPI and a member of AIChE. He holds three patents and has authored two books and more than 100 conference papers.

Jameel’s professional specialties include pulping and bleaching, process optimization and simulation, and bio-energy and gasification. He earned his Bachelors degree in Chemical Engineering from Texas A&M University and his Ph.D. degree in Chemical Engineering from Princeton.

Popular with students in the paper science & engineering program and noted for his enthusiasm for his subject matter, this is Jameel's third Board of Governor's College Award of Excellence in Teaching, earning it previously in both 2003-2004 and in 2008-2009.

More information about Dr. Hasan Jameel

NC State to Co-Sponsor "The Green Business Forum"

News Release – October 2, 2009

The Green Business Forum SignNorth Carolina State University, along with the Southern Growth Policies Board, The Energy Foundation, NC Greenpower and SAFER Alliance, will sponsor this year's The Green Business Forum.

This one-day program will focus on the economic opportunity of the south's researchers, entrepreneurs, manufacturers and service providers to power the region's green economy today and into the future.

At the event, participants will learn where the south's research and technology strengths lie and where new breakthroughs will emerge; meet the entrepreneurs who are building new green businesses and jobs; and discuss strategies for the south to fully harness the potential of the green economy.

The event will be held Friday, October 23, at the NC Biotechnology Center in Durham. For more information, please visit: http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/nreos/forest/feop/renewable/index.html
Registration Deadline – October 16, 2009

Event planning and logistics provided by the NC State University Forestry and Environmental Outreach Program

 

Natural Resources Dean Robert Brown Receives Wildlife Society Fellow Award

News Release – October 1, 2009

Robert Brown acceptsf plaquereconizing his recognition as a TWS Fellow from Tom Franklin, President of The Wildlife SocietyDr. Robert D. Brown, dean of the NC State University College of Natural Resources was recognized as a Fellow of The Wildlife Society (TWS) at the Society's 2009 annual meeting in Monterey, CA.  The career award recognized Dr. Brown’s contributions to science and to The Wildlife Society. 

After receiving a B.S. and Ph.D in animal nutrition, Dr. Brown served on the faculty of Texas A&I University in Kingsville and then as a research scientist for the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute at that institution.  Dr. Brown’s research focused on the development of antler growth in deer as a model for osteoporosis in elderly humans and on comparative wildlife nutrition and physiology.  He has published over 120 articles and has edited three books on such species as White-tailed, Axis and Sika deer, Nilgai antelope, Javalina, and Bobwhite quail, as well as on higher education and conservation policy. 

In addition to his research and classroom teaching, Dr. Brown has served as Head of the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries at Mississippi State University and the Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences Department at Texas A&M University.  There he also served as Director of the Institute of Renewable Natural Resources (IRNR) and Coordinator of the Gulf Coast Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit.  

Dr. Brown served The Wildlife Society as Southwest Section Representative, then national Vice President, President-Elect, President and Past President.  He chaired numerous TWS committees including a successful $ 3 million fund-raising campaign.  He has also been President of the National Association of University Fisheries and Wildlife Programs, Chair of their Section on Fish and Wildlife and their Board on Natural Resources, and Chair of the External Review Panel of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative.  He has served on the Board of the Texas Nature Conservancy and in an advisory capacity to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. 

In 2006, Dr. Robert Brown was appointed Dean of the College of Natural Resources at North Carolina State University, where he also serves on the Board of the North Carolina Forestry Association, the North Carolina Forestry Council, and the Center for Paper Business and Industry Science at Georgia Tech