Douglas B. Clark
Douglas Clark is a copywriter and speechwriter with a healthy appetite for all things digital. He has more than 15 years' agency and independent experience in corporate and marketing communication, and his clients come from diverse industries, specializing in anything from financial products and toothpaste to software for the visualization of computational fluid dynamics data. Among his clients are Accenture, American Express, Coca-Cola, Colgate-Palmolive, Hewlett-Packard, and Panasonic.
ChEnected contributions
Nuclear Energy in a Post-Fukushima World [On-Location]
While Fukushima has had an extraordinary effect on nuclear energy, it's still with us and there's a lot changing. Hear how the industry is evolving and where it's headed.
We Saw You at the Halloween Bash! [Photos]
Check out photos of the many costumes spotted at he Halloween Bash.
Student Welcome Kicks Off Conference
AIChE welcomed students with thoughts about the bright future of the "shale gas generation" of chemical engineers and recognition for the latest international Chem-E-Car competitors.
Line Dancing ChEs at the Student Welcome Mixer [PHOTOS]
Did our camera catch you line dancing at the Student Welcome Mixer? Check out our photos!
Women in Chemical Technology: June Wispelwey, Executive Director of AIChE
This month the Chemical Heritage Foundation launched a new series of interviews featuring women in chemistry and related sciences. Among the first interviews was June Wispelwey, AIChE's executive director.
Breakthrough in Organic Fuel-Cell Catalysts
One of the current problems with fuel cells is the catalyst that helps convert sources of stored energy such as hydrogen and oxygen into electrical energy.
Biological Engineering Looks to In-Vitro Leather Production
Have trouble settling for "pleather" but can't stand the idea of slaughtering animals? Thanks to biological engineering, you may have a new option soon: leather produced in vitro.
Teenagers Illegally Enrich Uranium [FunnyBone]
Leave it to the Onion to combine two serious topics to create something outlandish and silly. Check out this hilarious fake news segment on illegal uranium enrichment by high school students.
Microbes Convert Renewable Electricity into Methane
Researchers at Stanford and Pennsylvania State have devised a way of using microbes t
Major Genome Facility Opening in Manhattan
Construction starts this month on the The New York Genome Center (NYGC) which aims to be the largest research center of its kind in North America. First on its list of major projects is Alzheimer's research.
World's First Computer Model of an Entire Organism
Opening the door to a new era computer-aided biological engineering, Stanford researchers announce in an article published in the journal Cell that they have completed the first computer model for an entire organism.
World's Lightest Material Unveiled
German researchers unveiled to the public the world's lightest material, which they call Aerographite. The material weights just 0.2 mg per cubic centimeter, making it 75 times lighter than Styrofoam.
Swallowing Nanofactory Pill Could One Day Treat Diseases
One day the capsule you swallow to treat a disease may not deliver medicine but instead may deliver DNA and other biological machinery—essentially a factory that creates medicine on demand.