News

  • Engineering building
    Six students from across the College of Engineering and Applied Science were selected as Herbst Fellows this semester, joining an elite group of scholars who embody the program’s commitment to ethical engineering study and practice.
  • Amy Zimmerman and Sarah Smith in 1999 presenting their capstone findings
    This year marks the 25th anniversary of the revamped and retooled Chemical Engineering Design Project course — a class (re)designed to provide seniors with practical problem-solving experience and foster stronger ties to industry.
  • Student artwork of planets, stars and a comet in outer space
    Postdocs and graduate students combined art, movement, dance and science for students from the Boulder Valley School District.
  • Juan Manuel Restrepo-Florez
    A Road Toward Sustainability – from Materials to Processes Speaker: Juan Manuel Restrepo-Flórez, Postdoctoral Associate University of Wisconsin-Madison Host: Will Medlin Tuesday, March 8, 2022 - 2:45 p.m.,
  • Elizabeth Lee portrait
    Computational Engineering of Materials at the Nanoscale—where “Classical” meets “Quantum” Speaker: Elizabeth Lee, Postdoctoral Researcher University of Chicago Host: Kayla Sprenger Thursday, March 3, 2022
  • Kara Fong in dark sweater with boats out of focus in background
    Improved understanding of transport in concentrated electrolyte solutions has important implications for energy storage, water purification, biological applications, and more. This understanding should ideally persist across length scales: we desire both continuum-level insight into macroscopic concentration and electric potential profiles as well as a molecular-level understanding of the mechanisms governing ion motion. However, the most ubiquitous theory to describe continuum-level electrolyte transport, the Stefan-Maxwell equations, yields transport coefficients which lack clear molecular-level interpretation and cannot be easily computed from molecular simulations.
  • Ivan Moreno-Hernandez
    Electrifying the Chemical Industry through Electrocatalyst Discovery and Nanoscale in situ Imaging Speaker: Ivan A. Moreno-Hernandez, Postdoctoral Scholar, Department of Chemistry, University of California,
  • Justin Tran and Kent Warren pose in front of lab equipment
    Hydrogen has long been seen as a possible renewable fuel source, held out of reach for full-scale adoption by production costs and inefficiencies. Researchers in the Weimer Group are working to address this by using solar thermal processing to drive high-temperature chemical reactions that produce hydrogen and carbon monoxide, which can be used to synthesize liquid hydrocarbon fuels.
  • Adam Holewinski
    Eight cross-disciplinary teams working to advance fundamental science in the removal of greenhouse gases from Earth’s atmosphere and oceans will receive awards totaling $1,210,000 in the second year of the Scialog: Negative Emissions Science initiative, sponsored by Research Corporation for Science Advancement and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, with additional support from the Climate Pathfinders Foundation. The 22 individual awards of $55,000 will go to 20 researchers from a variety of institutions in the United States and Canada. Among the awardees is Adam Holewinski, Chemical & Biological Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder.
  • Taylor Ware
    Stimuli-responsive polymers respond to their environment without requiring motors, sensors, or power supplies. These materials can replace the functions of traditional machines in conditions or at scales, such as in the human body, where traditional actuators, electronics, and batteries are difficult to employ.
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