Meet the 2016 Candidates – Part 3
Voting for next year's AIChE Board of Directors is under way as of September 6th. Have your say and help direct the future of AIChE by voting!
Voting for next year's AIChE Board of Directors is under way as of September 6th. Have your say and help direct the future of AIChE by voting!
Nominations are now being accepted for the AIChE 35 Under 35 Award.
Tests by researchers at Baylor College of Medicine have recently shown that nanoparticles modified with polyethylene glycol selectively affect specific areas of the immune system, showing potential
A new electric bus has clocked 600 miles on one charge in track testing, and its makers are ready to rid the country of diesel buses.
Artificial intelligence seems to be finding its way into every field these days, and the field of materials science is no exception.
Low carbon jet fuel just got a big boost.
Voting for next year's AIChE Board of Directors is under way as of September 6th. Have your say and help direct the future of AIChE by voting!
London's new mayor Sadiq Khan just put fifty electric buses on the streets to help shrink a toxic cloud blighting one of Europe's most magisterial cities.
A startup in southern California is designing microbes that extend DNA beyond the natural A, T, G, and C components to include X and Y.
This month, CEP features a Society of Biological Engineering supplement that delves into synthetic biology. The issue also takes a close look at drug-delivery nanoparticles, among many other biological and chemical engineering topics.
Most people who live outside California don’t know that a large part of the state was originally a desert, and without water, it will revert back to desert.
Voting for next year's AIChE Board of Directors is under way as of September 6th. Have your say and help direct the future of AIChE by voting!
This month, we feature a tutorial from the Learn ChemE YouTube series that deals with kinetics and reactor design.
Can a balding, late-middle-aged researcher who's hawking a still-uncommercialized technology transform America's aging fleet of aerobic waste treatment plants?
It sounds like something straight out of a science fiction movie: bacteria that feeds on human flesh.
Research suggests that flakes of graphene welded together into solid materials may have potential for use as bone implants.
Researchers at the University of Edinburgh have devised an efficient and more environmental method for recovering gold from old electronic equipment.
Few of her peers were surprised when Professor Joan Rose received 2016's Stockholm Water Prize in Geneva last March, which celebrated her career sleuthing, identifying, and eliminating dan