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Fluid Systems Engineering & Management Blog

by Swagelok Northern California

Swagelok Northern California Teaches At Graduate School

by Jeff Hopkins, on 4/16/14 8:00 AM

We help UC Santa Cruz teach a new generation of scientists and engineers


Swagelok Northern California Training
Swagelok Northern California's lead trainer, Mike Valentine teaches graduate students at U.C. Santa Cruz's Silicon Valley campus about fluid system components used in semiconductor manufacturing. You can learn more about Swagelok education and training here »

Mike Valentine, one of our senior account managers and lead trainer, got a chance to discuss Swagelok products with a different kind of audience recently. He spent an afternoon as a guest lecturer, explaining the theory and application of Swagelok components to engineering graduate students from UC Santa Cruz.

The opportunity came about as an invitation from Dr. Michael Oye, a professor of electrical engineering and co-director of the Advanced Studies Laboratories at the NASA Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley. The Advanced Studies Laboratories is a partnership between UC Santa Cruz and NASA Ames Research Center to foster collaborations between Academia, Government, and Industry.

Remembering his own days as a graduate student, Oye wanted to get a new generation of scientists and engineers off to a stronger start than he had. “I first learned about parts selection second-hand from senior grad students back in the '90s, so I never had an opportunity to interact with the people who know best until I moved up to the Bay Area,” Oye said.

Junior graduate students tend to accept what they are taught by senior graduate students as “law.” Then the junior graduate students eventually become senior graduate students and pass along the same information. Some of that information is simply wrong, Oye said, and it has been one of his pet peeves for years.

Word of authority

To break the cycle, Oye invited Valentine to talk about Swagelok parts and how to select them. He also explained the right way to install them. Regular readers of our blog already know that Swagelok makes a wide variety of valves. Valentine explained the different kinds and the applications they are best suited for. The students also learned to watch out for reactivity between valve components and the fluids being sent through the line.

Even something as simple as properly tightening a fitting has to be learned. Valentine showed the right way and some wrong ways, and the kinds of failures that result from improper installation.

“In order to be able to conduct research, we need Swagelok parts,” Oye said. The better the students understand the components and how to use them, the better their research projects will go. Now when the students go back to the lab and tell colleagues how to properly use a Swagelok part, they can speak with authority.

Lastly, Valentine showed some of the products used in semiconductor applications like Atomic Layer Deposition and 1-1/8” Modular Gas Systems.

The students are not all going to go into research, Oye noted, so it’s useful to get an early look at the Modular Platform Components (MPC) they may encounter in the field. “When they go into a company and see this, they know what it is,” Oye said. “Or if they don’t see it, they know they could use it as an efficient way to minimize the dead space in their parts.”

Long distance learning

Video conferencing technology allowed three different groups of people to attend Valentine’s guest lecture. About one-third of the students were seated in the room at UCSC Silicon Valley Center. Another third watched on monitors from Santa Cruz. The final third watched online. It was a fully interactive experience. Cameras were pointed at both the students in Santa Cruz and at Valentine so that they could see one another. Live microphones in the classrooms made it easy to ask questions no matter where the students were located.

Swagelok is the only company that Oye has asked to send a representative for this class. It’s important to learn the theory of gas flow and the equations that govern it, he said, but it’s also valuable to know practical elements, such as the fact that any bend in a tube will create a pressure drop.

“I'm an experimentalist by trade. I’m in the lab and always putting together parts for gas handling and vacuum systems. Because of that I know of Swagelok,” he said.

The guest lecture worked so well that Oye plans to bring Valentine back again at the end of April. This will be an opportunity for companies as well as students. As long as there are enough chairs in the room, Oye is glad to have Swagelok Northern California customers sit in on the guest lecture. If you’d like to attend, call me at Swagelok Northern California at 510-933-6200, or send me an e-mail at Jeff.Hopkins@norcal.swagelok.com.

When Will It Burst?

Valentine will be testing the students knowledge and guessing abilities by showing them our first few When Will It Burst? videos.  There's still time for you to watch the first burst video and enter a guess for a chance to win!  You can watch it here.  

Additional Resources

When Will It Burst?    
Watch the video then enter a guess for a chance to win "When Will It Burst?"    
Topics:Swagelok Northern CaliforniaSemiconductorTraining

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