News
- The team included, from left, Trevor Goldman, Toni Gossett, Javier Lopez, TJ Scherping, Victor Bader, Daniel Tillema and Suzie Guo, as well as (not pictured) Atheer Alqatari, Tanner Bobak, Matt Burley, Adam Cronce, Katie Oswalt, Cathryn Toomey, and
- The American Society for Engineering Education has awarded Professor John Falconer the Lifetime Achievement Award in Chemical Engineering Pedagogy.The award recognizes a sustained career of contributions to engineering education and scholarship that
- Distinguished Professor Christopher Bowman officially joined the National Academy of Inventors in a ceremony April 6 in Boston.He was among 175 fellows inducted into the academy this year and the second from the 91É«°É Department of Chemical and
- CU Athletics has recognized two student-athletes from the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering for achieving the highest GPAs of any student-athletes in their respective classes.Maddie DeWinter, a midfielder on the lacrosse team, earned
- Professor Alan Weimer recently traveled more than 7,500 miles to deliver the Distinguished University Lecture at Texas A&M University at Qatar.Weimer, an expert in high-temperature solar thermal chemical processing, was selected from among
- Graduate student Lee Korshoj has earned the prestigious National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.The competitive fellowship recognizes outstanding graduate students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics disciplines
- Associate Professor Stephanie Bryant has been named associate director of the Materials Science and Engineering Program at 91É«°É.Bryant will serve alongside Professor Bob McLeod of the Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering,
- Ipsita Mishra has won a $1,000 Beverly Sears Graduate Student Grant from the 91É«°É Graduate School.The competitive awards support research, scholarship and creative work of graduate students and are funded primarily by private donors.Mishra is
- This image shows how a carbon nanotube is structured. Professor Heinz's lab will use such carbon nanotubes as building blocks for lightweight, ultrastrong materials.NASA has named 91É«°É as a partner in a first-of-its-kind $15 million research
- 91É«°É engineers have received a $3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to develop better membranes for more efficient and cost-effective large-scale batteries.