Unique Bacterial Chemist in the War on Potatoes
Researchers at Georgia Tech have found potato bacteria could be used to rescue crops and degrade pollutants.
Read more about Unique Bacterial Chemist in the War on Potatoes
Researchers at Georgia Tech have found potato bacteria could be used to rescue crops and degrade pollutants.
Read more about Unique Bacterial Chemist in the War on PotatoesResearchers at the University of Michigan have engineered a material that could lead to a new generation of computing devices, packing in more computing power while consuming a fraction of the energy that today’s electronics require
Read more about "Atomic Sandwiches" Could Make Computers 100X GreenerCapturing light to produce energy is a dangerous business for plants. The Kramer lab at Michigan State University has discovered one important reason why, in their search for ways to improve crop yields.
Read more about The Dangers of Overcharging Your PlantsA team of researchers from the University of Houston and the California Institute of Technology has reported a more efficient catalyst, using molybdenum sulfoselenide particles on three-dimensional porous nickel diselenide foam to increase catalytic activity.
Read more about Researchers Discover More Efficient Way to Split Water, Produce HydrogenMicrobiologists at Georgia Tech are working at The Spruce and Peatland Responses Under Climatic and Environmental Change (SPRUCE) experiment as part of a major research project with the goal of understanding how the ecosystem may respond to climate change.
Read more about Shaking a Sleeping Bog MonsterResearcher Katerina Aifantis, the principal investigator on a nanotechnology-based collaborative research project between the University of Arizona and Michigan Technological University, is probing mechanical processes at the nanoscale with a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Read more about UA Engineer Predicts Materials Failure From the Tiniest of GrainsMilton Smith, Michigan State University College of Natural Science chemistry professor, has been awarded a three-year, $500,000 grant for research on renewable energy by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
Read more about MSU Chemist Receives $500,000 DOE Grant for Renewable Energy WorkErik Muller, Principal Investigator in the Department of Materials Science and Chemical Engineering at Stony Brook University, leads a collaborative project, “Ultra-compact Diamond X-Ray Monitors,” that has been selected as a finalist for the 2016 R&D 100 Awards.
Read more about Research Led by SBU’s Erik Muller is Finalist in R&D 100 AwardsComputer scientists from Rice University, Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have used one of Isaac Newton’s numerical methods to demonstrate how “inexact computing” can dramatically improve the quality of simulations run on supercomputers.
Read more about Computer Scientists Find ‘Inexact Computing’ Can Improve AnswersResearchers at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science used data collected over the past 15 years to advance the understanding of massive ocean carbon reservoir and its impact to marine food web.
Read more about UM Researchers Study Vast Carbon Residue of Ocean LifeNew work from a team led by Carnegie’s Timothy Strobel has identified the structure of a new type of ice crystal that resembles the mineral quartz and is stuffed with over five weight percent of energy-rich hydrogen molecules, which is a long-standing Department of Energy goal for hydrogen storage.
Read more about Structure of Hydrogen-Stuffed, Quartz-Like Form of Ice RevealedThis past summer, University of South Dakota graduate student Riley Paulsen travelled halfway across the country to participate in a prestigious and competitive internship funded by the Department of Energy.
Read more about Graduate Student Completes Prestigious Department of Energy Internship