Additive Engineering Solutions, an Ohio-based company that’s now a leader in large-format 3D printing, began as an idea ...
In an innovative new AI project, tech startup company Atomic Canyon and their partner, Diablo Canyon — California’s only ...
ORNL senior computational scientist Damien Lebrun-Grandie and colleagues were recognized by HPCwire at SC25 for their leadership in the High-Performance Software Foundation, a collaboration advancing ...
The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory joined other national labs in hosting DOE Undersecretary of Science ...
Brian Davison, chief scientist for biotechnology and a Corporate Fellow at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has been named president-elect of the American Institute of ...
Researchers demonstrated 120 kilowatt wireless power transfer at the National Transportation Research Center, a DOE Office of Science User Facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. From left are ORNL ...
As the US Department of Energy’s largest multi-program laboratory, ORNL is engaged in a wide range of activities that support the department’s mission of ensuring America’s security and prosperity by ...
MSTD is responsible for the operations of a number of core capabilities at ORNL. With its world-leading core expertise, MSTD staff support the missions of all eight of the lab's science and technology ...
“The results were developed using the current capability of existing tools and data,” Liu added. “We combined NREL’s Regional Energy Deployment System model and PLEXOS, a commercial software for more ...
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Nov. 30, 2016 — The recently discovered element 117 has been officially named "tennessine" in recognition of Tennessee’s contributions to its discovery, including the efforts of the ...
October 15, 2015 – The Molten Salt Reactor Experiment (MSRE), which ran a brief four years in the 1960s but earned an enduring legacy as an innovative reactor technology concept, this year marks a ...
In the summer of 1965, Emory Collins saw a notice on a bulletin board at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, asking for chemical engineers to help start up a new radiochemical processing plant.