Morpheus Lab  
 
search




Associate Research Scientist Young-Tai Choi.

Associate Research Scientist Young-Tai Choi.

 

Congratulations to Young-Tai Choi who was promoted to Associate Research Professor on May 2nd, 2013.

Young-Tai Choi has served in the department as Assistant Research Scientist for 14 years. He received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in Department of Mechanical Engineering, Inha University in Korea in 1992, 1994, and 1999, respectively. He joined the Smart Structures Laboratory in the Alfred Gessow Rotorcraft Center at the University of Maryland in 1999. He has conducted the design, testing, and control of passive, semi-active, and active systems and structures with key components of smart materials such as magnetorheological fluids and piezoelectric materials. In addition, he has explored the design and analysis of novel energy harvesting devices using smart materials. He has co-authored 44 contributions to journals and 51 papers to international conference proceedings. He is co-inventor on 4 U.S. patents and 1 patent pending. He was awarded the ASME Adaptive Structure and Adaptive Materials Best Paper Award (2004). He was a leading member of the Boeing Rotorcraft Active Crash Protection System Development Team, which was awarded the Harry T. Jensen Award (2011) from the American Helicopter Society in recognition of an outstanding contribution to the improvement of helicopter reliability, maintainability or safety through improved design.

May 3, 2013


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Four Aerospace Engineering Faculty Named AIAA Associate Fellows

UMD Students Sweep 2025 VFS Student Design Competition

Maryland #12 Among Publics for Undergraduate Engineering

Logan Selph Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

UMD Team Advances Mission Concept for 2029 Asteroid Flyby

Summer Interns Build Pro-Level Skills at UROC

Akin Receives 2025 ICES Award for Technical Excellence

Two UMD Teams Among Twelve Selected for NASA’s M2M X-Hab Challenge

Team “Crossfire” Advances to Phase II of XPRIZE Wildfire Semifinals

Soliton Signatures: A New Strategy for Tracking Teeny Tiny Space Debris

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home aero umd NIA NASA