Awards
- Assistant Professor Anushree Chatterjee has won a 2017 Young Faculty Award from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).The program works to identify and engage junior faculty members across the United States to introduce them to
- Senior Hashim Al Hajji recently won first place in a Toastmasters International contest.Toastmasters International is a nonprofit organization that helps members improve their communication, public speaking and leadership skills.Al Hajji won
- The team included, from left, Trevor Goldman, Toni Gossett, Javier Lopez, TJ Scherping, Victor Bader, Daniel Tillema and Suzie Guo, as well as (not pictured) Atheer Alqatari, Tanner Bobak, Matt Burley, Adam Cronce, Katie Oswalt, Cathryn Toomey, and
- The American Society for Engineering Education has awarded Professor John Falconer the Lifetime Achievement Award in Chemical Engineering Pedagogy.The award recognizes a sustained career of contributions to engineering education and scholarship that
- Distinguished Professor Christopher Bowman officially joined the National Academy of Inventors in a ceremony April 6 in Boston.He was among 175 fellows inducted into the academy this year and the second from the ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ Department of Chemical and
- CU Athletics has recognized two student-athletes from the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering for achieving the highest GPAs of any student-athletes in their respective classes.Maddie DeWinter, a midfielder on the lacrosse team, earned
- Graduate student Lee Korshoj has earned the prestigious National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.The competitive fellowship recognizes outstanding graduate students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics disciplines
- Ipsita Mishra has won a $1,000 Beverly Sears Graduate Student Grant from the ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ Graduate School.The competitive awards support research, scholarship and creative work of graduate students and are funded primarily by private donors.Mishra is
- 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 ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ researchers to simulate particle behavior to a greater degree than ever before.
- The U.S. Department of Energy has awarded $3 million in additional research funding to Professors Christine Hrenya and Thomas Hauser to advance simulation technologies that are being used to develop next-generation energy systems.