News
- Associate Professor Hendrik Heinz in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering has been named CU Boulder’s Outstanding Postdoc Mentor for 2018. The award recognizes one individual who provides exceptional mentoring, training and
- Anton Paar's lead rheology scientist, Abhi Shetty (second from left), joins Professor Christine Hrenya (right) and graduate students (from left) Noemi Collado, Ipsita Mishra and Kevin Kellogg for the rheometer installation.University of Colorado
- CU Boulder’s undergraduate chemical engineering program has been ranked No. 17 in the nation by U.S. News and World Report.The program was No. 11 among public institutions whose highest degree is a doctorate.The rankings are an improvement from the
- Professor Alan Weimer in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering will receive the Lifetime Achievement Award for Particle Technology from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.The award recognizes Weimer’s lifetime of scientific
- The thermostat may read 90 degrees Fahrenheit outside the sprawling federal research complex in Lakewood, Colorado, but inside, CU Boulder undergraduate student Casey Vanderheyden is donning a bulky winter coat, gloves and boots as though she is headed to the South Pole.
In a sense, she is. Vanderheyden is reaching the end of her six-week summer work stint at the National Ice Core Laboratory (NICL), one of the country’s most prominent storage facilities for ice samples collected from around the world. - Alumnus Cole DeForest, who earned his PhD in our department in 2011, has been named one of AIChE’s “35 Under 35.” The award recognizes his contributions to the institute and the chemical engineering profession.An assistant professor at the
- CU Boulder engineers have revamped a World War II-era process for making magnesium that requires half the energy and produces a fraction of the pollution compared to today’s leading methods.The breakthrough process, developed in the labs of
- A multi-institutional team led by NREL, including new ChBE faculty member Aaron Holder (second from left), discovered a way to create new alloys that could form the basis of next-generation semiconductors. The NREL team includes (from left) Stephan