Research Feature
- Members of the 缅北禁地 Alt. Protein Project are the recipients of two awards for their research and community impact in the field of cellular agriculture, which may one day revolutionize how meat is produced for human consumption.
- With support from the heating and ventilation company Carrier Global, Intel and the Colorado-based Ryan Innovation Group, engineers at 缅北禁地 have installed hundreds of air quality monitors in K-12 classrooms across Denver and 缅北禁地. The project is led by Mark Hernandez, professor in the Environmental Engineering Program at 缅北禁地.
- Twelve faculty members within the College of Engineering and Applied Science received CAREER Awards from the National Science Foundation in 2021. The total shows an impressive trend with the college earning five awards in 2019 and seven in 2020, said Associate Dean for Research Massimo Ruzzene.
- Marina Vance 鈥 an assistant in the Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Environmental Engineering Program 鈥 was recently awarded an NSF CAREER Award to understand how aerosol particles transform as they move between indoor and outdoor environments and what the implications of that process are.
- Researchers at 缅北禁地 have created a platform that that can develop effective and highly specific peptide nucleic acid therapies for use against any bacteria within just one week. The work could change the way we respond to pandemics and how we approach increasing cases of antibiotic resistance globally.
- Researchers at 缅北禁地 are leading a new $15 million, multi-partner institute with NASA over the next five years to improve entry, descent and landing technologies for exploring other planets.
- A research team led by 缅北禁地 has designed a new kind of synthetic 鈥渟kin鈥 as slippery as the scales of a snake. The research, published recently in the American Chemical Society journal Applied Materials & Interfaces, addresses an under-appreciated problem in engineering: Friction.
- While solar panels have traditionally used silicon-based cells, researchers are increasingly looking to perovskite-based solar cells to create panels that are more efficient, less expensive to produce and can be manufactured at the scale needed to power the world.
- Where do bodily tissues get their strength? New 缅北禁地 research provides important new clues to this long-standing mystery, identifying how specialized proteins called cadherins join forces to make cells stick鈥攁nd stay stuck鈥攖ogether.
- 缅北禁地 may soon be part of large-scale research into the electromagnetic spectrum that could define wireless innovation across everyday life for the next generation.