Meet students researching biofuels, batteries and more

This article is part one of a two-part series highlighting student researchers presenting at the Fall 2025 Fulton Forge Student Research Expo on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025. Read part two on Monday, Nov. 10, 2025, and learn more about the expo.
Improving battery performance data analysis software, accelerating bacteria production to create biofuels faster, reducing harmful algal blooms and optimizing semiconductor manufacturing processes are just some of the ways Arizona State University students are addressing practical challenges through hands-on research.
Undergraduate and graduate students in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at ASU have several opportunities to conduct research that has real-world impact. Through individual projects mentored by Fulton Schools faculty members, students apply their classroom knowledge, build new skills and forge meaningful advances in the research themes of data science, education, energy, health, security, semiconductor manufacturing and sustainability.
In the Fulton Undergraduate Research Initiative, also known as FURI, and the Master’s Opportunity for Research in Engineering, or MORE, programs, participants conceptualize ideas, develop plans and investigate research questions during a semester.
Students participating in the Grand Challenges Scholars Program, or GCSP, can apply for additional funding to conduct research through the GCSP research stipend program. Conducting research is one part of the rigorous GCSP competency requirements designed to prepare students to solve the world’s most complex societal challenges.
These three programs enhance students’ ability to innovate, think independently and solve problems in their communities. They also benefit from the technical and soft skills they gain, which prepare them for their careers and the pursuit of advanced degrees.
Each semester, students who participate in FURI, MORE and the GCSP research stipend program are invited to present their findings at the Fulton Forge Student Research Expo.
Meet four of the research participants highlighted below and more than 100 other student investigators at the Fall 2025 Fulton Forge Student Research Expo, which is open to the public, on Tuesday, Nov. 18, from 1 to 3 p.m. in the Memorial Union on the ASU Tempe campus.
Photographer: Erika Gronek/ASU
Zeyad George
Zeyad George, an undergraduate Fulton Schools student majoring in electrical engineering, began participating in FURI due to the influence of one of his instructors. Yoon Hwa, a Fulton Schools assistant professor of electrical engineering, taught one of George’s classes and helped him get started in FURI. Now, under Hwa’s supervision, George is conducting research that aims to improve data collection from lithium-ion, or Li-ion, batteries.
Photographer: Erika Gronek/ASU
Shira Shecter
For Shira Shecter, a Fulton Schools chemical engineering undergraduate student, a fascination with sustainability has inspired both her intended career direction and her FURI project. Working under Arul Mozhy Varman, a Fulton Schools associate professor of chemical engineering, Shecter is investigating how to engineer cyanobacteria to quickly produce biofuels.
Photographer: Erika Gronek/ASU
Diego Sanchez
Diego Sanchez, a Fulton Schools environmental engineering undergraduate student, chose his project due to a desire he’s had since his teenage years to stop harmful algal blooms, or HABs. Working with Fulton Schools civil, environmental and sustainable engineering faculty mentors Sergi Garcia-Segura, an assistant professor, and Jesus Moron-Lopez, an adjunct faculty member, Sanchez is exploring the use of small bubbles made of ozone to reduce HABs’ presence in bodies of water.
Photographer: Erika Gronek/ASU
Sidra Elsaady
Sidra Elsaady, an undergraduate engineering student specializing in electrical systems engineering, decided to join FURI to see how the theoretical concepts she was learning in her classes applied to the real world. Supervised by Nick Rolston, a Fulton Schools assistant professor of electrical engineering, Elsaady is testing different treatment methods’ effects on semiconductor device packaging quality to improve the reliability of electronics.

