For its prestigious Graduate Student Research Program, the Department of Energy has selected Nick Pollak, a UNH Ph.D. chemistry candidate.
Researchers will work with organizations to collect community input and on-the-ground data, then develop climate models relevant at the urban scale.
The project will study how to optimize and improve the electric grid reliability while handling the rapid move to renewable energy resources.
A theoretical study is modeling how CO2 could be combined with ethylene to make acrylic acid, a component of many household industrial products.
MIT chemical engineers have shown that specialized particles can oscillate together, demonstrating a phenomenon known as emergent behavior.
PhD candidate Zack Bruce Hall II is one of 44 awardees of the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science Graduate Student Research Program.
University of Pittsburgh engineers utilize signaling chemicals that replicate “cell communication” to form capsule clusters.
The studies focus on the role of microbiomes in the cycling of carbon in terrestrial soils and wetlands by using genomics-based and systems biology.
The research aims to help the semiconductor industry make computing less of an energy hog.
Denver Paul Strong has received a Department of Energy Office of Science Graduate Student Research (SCGSR) Program award.