Making Ammonia 'Greener'
Chemical engineers at Case Western Reserve create ammonia from nitrogen, water; that could lead to smaller ammonia processing plants powered by alternative energy.
Read more about Making Ammonia 'Greener'
Chemical engineers at Case Western Reserve create ammonia from nitrogen, water; that could lead to smaller ammonia processing plants powered by alternative energy.
Read more about Making Ammonia 'Greener'
Ayman M. Karim, associate professor of chemical engineering and Hongliang Xin, assistant professor of chemical engineering, both in the Virginia Tech College of Engineering, have identified the structure of iridium single-atom catalysts for carbon monoxide oxidation. The identification of the structure and reaction mechanism will help in the design of better and more cost-efficient catalysts.
Read more about Discovery of Single Atom Structure Leads to More Efficient Catalyst
Chemistry professor Karah Knope, who researches elements essential to nuclear energy, is one of 84 scientists at universities and national laboratories receiving an Early Career Award from the U.S. Department of Energy. The award honors outstanding tenure-track researchers who received their Ph.D.s within the last 10 years and comes with a $150,000 grant each year for five years to cover salary and research expenses.
Read more about DOE Early Career Award Goes to Nuclear Energy Elements Researcher
Boston College researcher Kun Jiang and Professor of Physics Ziqiang Wang help an international team of colleagues explain new findngs in the kagome magnet.
Read more about Kagome Discoveries
West Virginia University physicists Cheng Cen, Lian Li, Yanjun Ma, Ming Yang and Chenhui Yan are looking beyond the limits of classical computing used in our everyday devices and are working toward making quantum device applications widely accessible.
Read more about Reimagining Information Processing
A new technique developed by researchers at the University of Chicago, allows scientists to build custom coats for nanoparticles in all kinds of specific shapes.
Read more about Scientists Design Custom Nanoparticles With New 'Stencil' Method
Researchers at Oregon State University have found that a chemical mechanism first described more than two centuries ago holds the potential to revolutionize energy storage for high-power applications like vehicles or electrical grids.
Read more about Proton Transport 'Highway' May Pave Way to Better High-power Batteries
Water splitting, the process of harvesting solar energy to generate energy-dense fuels, could be simplified thanks to new research including faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York.
Read more about New Water Splitting Catalyst Could Make it Easier to Generate Solar Fuel
An international team of researchers has reported a breakthrough in fabricating atom-thin processors — a discovery that could have far-reaching impacts on nanoscale chip production and in labs across the globe where scientists are exploring 2D materials for ever-smaller and -faster semiconductors.
Read more about Breakthrough Reported in Fabricating Nanochips
After scanning about a quarter of the southern skies over 800 nights, the Dark Energy Survey finished taking data on Jan. 9. It ends as one of the most sensitive and comprehensive surveys of its kind, recording data from more than 300 million distant galaxies.
Read more about After Mapping Millions of Galaxies, Dark Energy Survey Finishes Data Collection
A new computational model could potentially boost efficiencies and profits in natural gas production by better predicting previously hidden fracture mechanics while accurately accounting for the known amounts of gas released during the process.
Read more about ‘Realistic’ New Model Points the Way to More Efficient and Profitable Fracking
A Columbia University-led team has developed a new method to finely tune adjacent layers of graphene—lacy, honeycomb-like sheets of carbon atoms—to induce superconductivity. Their research provides new insights into the physics underlying this two-dimensional material’s intriguing characteristics.
Read more about Unlocking Graphene’s Superconducting Powers with a Twist and a Squeeze