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Researcher
- Peeyush Nandwana
- Hongbin Sun
- Amit Shyam
- Blane Fillingim
- Brian Post
- Lauren Heinrich
- Rangasayee Kannan
- Sudarsanam Babu
- Thomas Feldhausen
- Vlastimil Kunc
- Yousub Lee
- Ahmed Hassen
- Alex Plotkowski
- Andres Marquez Rossy
- Bruce A Pint
- Bryan Lim
- Christopher Fancher
- Dan Coughlin
- Gordon Robertson
- Ilias Belharouak
- Jay Reynolds
- Jeff Brookins
- Jim Tobin
- Josh Crabtree
- Kim Sitzlar
- Merlin Theodore
- Peter Wang
- Pradeep Ramuhalli
- Praveen Cheekatamarla
- Ruhul Amin
- Ryan Dehoff
- Steven Guzorek
- Steven J Zinkle
- Subhabrata Saha
- Thien D. Nguyen
- Tim Graening Seibert
- Tomas Grejtak
- Vipin Kumar
- Vishaldeep Sharma
- Weicheng Zhong
- Wei Tang
- Xiang Chen
- Yanli Wang
- Ying Yang
- Yiyu Wang
- Yutai Kato

In nuclear and industrial facilities, fine particles, including radioactive residues—can accumulate on the interior surfaces of ventilation ducts and equipment, posing serious safety and operational risks.

The invention presented here addresses key challenges associated with counterfeit refrigerants by ensuring safety, maintaining system performance, supporting environmental compliance, and mitigating health and legal risks.

The lack of real-time insights into how materials evolve during laser powder bed fusion has limited the adoption by inhibiting part qualification. The developed approach provides key data needed to fabricate born qualified parts.

A new nanostructured bainitic steel with accelerated kinetics for bainite formation at 200 C was designed using a coupled CALPHAD, machine learning, and data mining approach.

This work seeks to alter the interface condition through thermal history modification, deposition energy density, and interface surface preparation to prevent interface cracking.

Additive manufacturing (AM) enables the incremental buildup of monolithic components with a variety of materials, and material deposition locations.

Through the use of splicing methods, joining two different fiber types in the tow stage of the process enables great benefits to the strength of the material change.

The first wall and blanket of a fusion energy reactor must maintain structural integrity and performance over long operational periods under neutron irradiation and minimize long-lived radioactive waste.