10-11-94 New professor will strengthen engineering research 10-10-94 NEW PROFESSOR STRENGTHENS OHIO STATE'S ENGINEERING RESEARCH COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The Ohio State University's leadership in the emerging field of electromechanics was strengthened this fall when Vadim I. Utkin joined the faculty of the College of Engineering. Utkin has been recommended for appointment to the Ford Motor Company Chair in Electromechanical Systems. He will be the first holder of this chair, which was funded by a gift from the automaker. Utkin, 56, previously headed the Discontinuous Control Systems Laboratory of the Institute of Control Sciences in Moscow, where he received his doctorate in 1971. Electromechanics, a blend of the traditional disciplines of electrical and mechanical engineering, is vital to improvements in the design, operation and control of machinery and vehicles. Utkin was introduced to the university community during a series of activities Oct. 10, including a lecture and a tour of Ohio State's Center for Automotive Research. Officials from Ford Motor Company joined the welcoming activities. John P. McTague, vice president - Technical Affairs for Ford Motor Company in Dearborn, said that Utkin's appointment to the Ford Chair "is the culmination of a shared vision between Ford and Ohio State." "A number of years ago, we recognized that the fields of electrical engineering and mechanical engineering were merging as the power of microprocessors became available to control many mechanical processes," McTague said. "This merging required that we re-think our approach to training engineers and administering research projects, so that the power of both the mechanical and electrical disciplines could be more sharply focused. "The result of this shared vision and the longstanding association between Ford and Ohio State was the creation of the Ford Chair in Electromechanical Systems. We are honored to have that chair filled by one of the world's foremost authorities on controls and robotics. We congratulate Dr. Utkin and look forward to a close relationship with him as he continues to pioneer in the field of electromechanical engineering." Jose B. Cruz Jr., dean of Ohio State's College of Engineering, has known Utkin since the mid-1970s when Utkin was at the University of Illinois as a visiting professor and Cruz was on the faculty there. They also have worked together in activities of the International Federation of Automatic Control. "He is truly an outstanding engineer and scientist and a very warm person," Cruz said. "I am very excited about his coming to Ohio State through the assistance of a Ford Motor Company endowment in electromechanical systems." Utkin is a visiting scholar in the College of Engineering until the university's Board of Trustees approves his appointment to the Ford Chair. A recipient of the Lenin Prize in 1972, Utkin is a pioneer in the sliding mode control technique. According to Utkin, it is better to design a control which has the same properties for different environmental conditions. Sliding mode control provides low sensitivity to variations of environment. In addition, he has worked with industry and government on the practical implementation of modern servo-control techniques, in which output variables are sensed directly in machines and compared to the commanded values the machines are supposed to be doing. Utkin has worked on these techniques to develop control applications in manufacturing, process control, and vehicle control. Electromechanics at Ohio State draws its strength from the university's two highly ranked departments of Mechanical Engineering and Electrical Engineering and from more than $10 million in endowed funds, the income from which is specifically dedicated to research on automobiles and related subjects. This is the largest university endowment portfolio devoted to transportation research in the country. In addition, an honors program for automotive engineering students has been singled out as one of the best in the nation. The departments of Mechanical Engineering and Electrical Engineering together educate about 1,500 undergraduate students and about 400 graduate students. Ford Motor Company's gift to create the Ford Chair is part of a long history of involvement with Ohio State. Ford traditionally recruits at the university and now has nearly 500 Ohio State graduates among its management and technical employees. Ohio is known informally as Ford's "second home," with major manufacturing and assembly facilities in Lorain, Avon Lake, Brook Park, Walton Hills, Maumee, Lima, Sharonville, Batavia and Sandusky. Ford has more than 24,000 employees in Ohio. # Contact: Steve Sterrett, director of news services for Ohio State, at (614) 292-8472, and Jerree Martin, Ford Public Affairs, at (313) 322-1300. Please note that Vadim Utkin's name is pronounced as Vah-DEEM WOODT-kin. [Submitted by: STERRETT (sterrett@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Tue, 11 Oct 1994 08:59:08 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.