Guest Blog: Keys to a Unique Nameplate

crucible in a foundry pouring molten metal
crucible in a foundry pouring molten metal
The pouring basin is kept full so that the molten metal quickly fills the mold cavity.
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In her guest blog, Dean of the College of Engineering Janet Callahan explains the story of her new nameplate. 

I’ve just received an amazing gift. A unique, foundry-casting of my name in brass. The Michigan Technological University foundry is one of the few remaining operational university metallurgical facilities where students can work to create 3D positive prints, stamp them into sand and then pour (with eye protection, fireproof aprons and face shields, tongs and gloves) orange-hot molten metal into the sand to create metal castings.

I’m near the end of my first year as dean of the College of Engineering at Michigan Tech. As background, it’s relevant to note that Michigan Tech was founded in 1885 to support the emerging copper and iron mining activities in Michigan’s western Upper Peninsula. Founded to train the future mining and metallurgical engineers, Michigan Tech through the years has established an incredibly strong reputation for training “can-do” engineers — many who know a bit about metallurgy. But even I was surprised when presented with a personalized nameplate for my office — cast in the MSE foundry using brass recovered from a cache of old University office keys.

nameplate reads: Janet Callahan
Old keys, new nameplate. Janet Callahan, the dean of the College of Engineering, celebrates her first year in style. 

The University had accumulated a large number of brass keys from locks that were long-ago decommissioned. Looking for an ultimate way to securely dispose of the keys, the University public safety department approached the foundry team to ask if they could be melted and destroyed using the foundry. “Of course,” they replied. Timing is always important. At about that same time, Materials Science and Engineering Chair Steve Kampe had asked the foundry team to make a nameplate for me. I was just starting my new job as dean, and happened to have my own credentials as a metallurgical engineer. Over the next several weeks, a pattern was 3D printed and the key brass was compositionally modified to facilitate its use as a casting alloy — and the nameplate came to be.

The “dean nameplate project” was led by Sam Dlugoss, a chemical engineering student hired as a co-op employee in the foundry. I am humbled each time I see it as I unlock my office door with my own brass key. I think about the hands of the graduate students, staff and faculty that are represented in the keys that ultimately were melted into my nameplate — and how these dedicated and aspiring engineers and scientists carried their keys and opened their labs and offices each day for many years, to do the work that has established the reputation we now carry on at Michigan Tech.

Last week, students in the foundry created more nameplates, this time for our College of Engineering Advisory Board Members. In the photos below, taken by Adam Johnson, the students are working with iron.

Michigan Technological University is a public research university founded in 1885 in Houghton, Michigan, and is home to more than 7,000 students from 55 countries around the world. Consistently ranked among the best universities in the country for return on investment, Michigan’s flagship technological university offers more than 120 undergraduate and graduate degree programs in science and technology, engineering, computing, forestry, business and economics, health professions, humanities, mathematics, social sciences, and the arts. The rural campus is situated just miles from Lake Superior in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, offering year-round opportunities for outdoor adventure.

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