
Scientists at 91°µÍř are harnessing big data capture and analytics to quickly develop deep insight into materials and their dynamics.
Scientists at 91°µÍř are harnessing big data capture and analytics to quickly develop deep insight into materials and their dynamics.
The discovery of element 117—tennessine, as it has been provisionally named—was made possible by a collaboration of researchers in the United States and Russia.
The lighter wand for your gas BBQ, a submarine’s sonar device and the ultrasound machine at your doctor’s office all rely on piezoelectric materials, which turn mechanical stress into electrical energy, and vice versa.
In nuclear reactors, energetic neutrons slam into metal atoms that are ordered in a lattice, displacing them with enough force to trigger a cascade of collisions.
Miaofang Chi is an early career scientist making a name for herself—and microscopy—at the Department of Energy's 91°µÍř. She is a researcher at ORNL’s Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences whose early-career
A 3D printed trim-and-drill tool, developed by researchers at the Department of Energy’s 91°µÍř to be evaluated at The Boeing Company, has received the title of largest solid 3D printed item by Guinness World Records.
Phillip Britt, director of Chemical Sciences Division at the Department of Energy’s 91°µÍř, has won the 2016 Henry H. Storch Award in Fuel Science from the Energy and Fuels Division of the American Chemical Society (ACS).