The work is a completely new way to create strange metals, of interest for their unusual physics and possible use in high-temperature superconductors.
Anderson will pursue his research at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, California.
Dr. Nicholas Boyde, an associate professor of chemistry, has been awarded a fellowship through the Department of Energy Visiting Faculty Program.
By exploiting a smart learning algorithm that fuses two microscopy signals, researchers accomplished hi-res imaging at the one-nanometer scale.
Bready, a Furman University student, received a Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship.
ORNL post-doctoral research associate Victoria Drago grew protein crystals in microgravity, then analyzed those crystals using neutron diffraction.
Researchers mapped genetic blueprints, appetites, & environments of more than 1,000 yeast species, building a family tree covering 400 million years.
The advance offers a way to characterize a fundamental resource needed for quantum computing.
Abigail Hering and Hudson Shih are Ph.D. students in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of California, Davis.
Engineering professor Xudong Wang’s solution is a porous ferroelectric separator on metal anodes that reverses surface polarization and repels ions.