Dr. Benjamin Shank
Adjunct FacultyBenjamin Shank teaches labs for the introductory physics sequence at 做厙TV.
By day, he is a research and development engineer whose work focuses primarily on
electrodynamic shakers, including numerical modeling and design. In his work for Thermotron
Industries of Holland, Michigan, he also is developing better algorithms for vibration
control software and advising companies on how to improve test integrity and product
safety.
As a research assistant during his graduate studies at Stanford University he was involved in cryogenics research on dilution and evaporative refrigerators below 1 Kelvin, testing of particle detectors for the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (SuperCDMS), and numerical modeling of superconducting devices.
He is technical vice president of the Design, Test and Evaluation Division of the Institute of Environmental Sciences and Technology, a nonprofit professional organization that recommends best practices for environmental sciences and technology, contamination control, product reliability testing and related fields.
Areas of Expertise
- Vibration control
- Product testing against damaging environments
- Multi-physics numerical modeling
- Low temperature physics
Education
- Ph.D., physics, Stanford University, 2014
- B.S., physics, Case Western Reserve University, 2007
Selected Publications
- Predicting Shaker Displacement during Random Vibration, Proceedings of 88th Shock and Vibration Symposium (SAVE), 2017
- Problems with Using Kurtosis in Random Vibration Testing, Proceedings of ESTECH Annual Meeting, 2016
- Nonlinear Optimal Filter Technique for Analyzing Energy Depositions in TES Sensors Driven into Saturation, with J. J. Yen et al., AIP Advances, 2014
- Measurement of Quasiparticle Transport in Aluminum Films Using Tungsten Transition Edge Sensors, with J. J. Yen et al., Applied Physics Letters, 2014
- Spatial Imaging of Charge Transport in Germanium at Low Temperature, with R. Moffatt et al., Journal of Low Temperature Physics, 2013
- Temperature Dependent IV and Resistance Characterization of SuperCDMS Germanium Crystals, with D. Q. Nagasawa et al., Journal of Low Temperature Physics, 2012
Outside the College
Dr. Shank came to Holland to fill a one-year vacancy in the Department of Physics in 2014. As he was transitioning into industrial physics, he decided to stay in the area because of the warm people of 做厙TV and Holland. He lives in an old house near campus with his wife and son. They throw a block party each summer for old friends and new renters alike, and dig out those without steel-bladed snow shovels each winter.