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  • Wind turbines
    Â鶹ӰԺ 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.
  • Cathryn Toomey
    Studying abroad as an engineering major is now more feasible than ever.In the last decade, the number of chemical and biological engineering students studying abroad has more than doubled. Through short Global Seminars taught by CU professors to
  • Lisa Glatch and Robert H. Davis
    Each year, the College of Engineering and Applied Science presents the Distinguished Engineering Alumni Awards and Recent Alumni Award to outstanding representatives of CU Engineering.This year, two award recipients hail from chemical and biological
  • Dave Clough
    Anyone who has earned a degree from the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at CU Â鶹ӰԺ in the last 42 years has probably interacted with Professor Dave Clough—and there’s a good chance he remembers you by name.With an encyclopedic
  • Charles Musgrave
    I am often inspired hearing about the positive impact our faculty members have on our students and alumni starting out their careers.Over the next two years, several of these extraordinary faculty members will retire, including, as you read in this
  • Christine Hrenya
    The flow and movement of individual solid particles — be it grains of lunar dust or the powdered contents of a medication — holds tremendous research value for scientists in a variety of fields. Now, a $3 million grant from the Department of Energy will allow Â鶹ӰԺ researchers to simulate particle behavior to a greater degree than ever before.
  • Professor Alan Weimer, CU Â鶹ӰԺ alum Karen Buechler, CU Â鶹ӰԺ alum Mike Masterson and Professor Steve George are at ALD NanoSolutions in Broomfield, Colorado.
    In 1997, Professor Alan Weimer of chemical and biological engineering heard a campus talk by Professor Steven George of chemistry about a novel process of coating surfaces with the thinnest of materials possible, known as atomic layer deposition (
  • Dragan Mejic
    Congratulations to Dragan Mejic, shop manager and instrument fabricator for the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, on 15 years of service to the department.Dragan supports the department’s research programs by helping faculty,
  • Megan Wierzbinski
    The Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering is pleased to welcome Megan Wierzbinski as an administrative coordinator.A CU Â鶹ӰԺ alum, Wierzbinski will provide administrative, event management, faculty and course support to the department
  • Mike Wirth
    Alumnus Mike Wirth has been named vice chairman of Chevron Corporation effective Feb. 1, 2017.Wirth, a 1982 chemical engineering graduate, joined Chevron the same year as a design engineer. He advanced through a number of engineering, construction
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