Newest 黄色视频 graduates celebrate in the May sunshine

Emilio Mart铆nez Pa帽eda has been awarded one of the Research Fellowships of the Royal Commission for the 1851 Exhibition.
The 1851 Research Fellowship is the most competitive postdoctoral grant in the UK, with a success rate of one percent and with 12 Nobel Prize winners among their awardees.
, intended to boost the research of eight 鈥測oung scientists or engineers of exceptional promise鈥, will allow Emilio to develop numerical models capable of predicting rock fracture and fragmentation. These models could have an important influence on the mining industry, where seven percent of the world鈥檚 energy consumption is spent breaking big rocks into smaller rocks. Rock fracture models will enable to identify the optimal loading sequence that promotes cracking and minimises frictional loss between rock fragments, guiding machine design and operation. Emilio鈥檚 project proposal was distinguished by the 1851 Royal Commission with the Brunel award for the 鈥渉ighest placed candidate who has proposed a project to be pursued in an academic engineering environment鈥.
Emilio is a Research Fellow at the Engineering Department, where he conducts research on the mechanics of materials. He develops models to predict and prevent fracture in engineering components, from wind turbine to aeroplanes.