News
- Alumna Kim Ogden has been named president-elect of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.Ogden, a professor of chemical and environmental engineering and director of the Institute for energy solutions at the University of Arizona, will become
- An international team of scientists, including researchers at CU Â鶹ӰԺ, has created a database of molecular dynamics models that simulate the properties of cement in all its varieties.The database is called cemff, for cement force fields. It
- Light-activated nanoparticles, also known as quantum dots, can provide a crucial boost in effectiveness for antibiotic treatments used to combat drug-resistant superbugs such as E. coli and Salmonella, new CU Â鶹ӰԺ research shows.
- Professor Christopher Bowman is the recipient of the 2017 Herman F. Mark Scholar Award from the American Chemical Society’s Polymer Chemistry Division.Bowman, a CU Distinguished Professor and Patten Endowed Chair, joined the faculty in 1992 and
- Associate Professor Hendrik Heinz in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering has been named CU Â鶹ӰԺ’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 Â鶹ӰԺ’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 Â鶹ӰԺ 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.