Filter News
Area of Research
News Type
News Topics
- (-) Bioenergy (2)
- (-) Cybersecurity (1)
- (-) Isotopes (3)
- (-) Microscopy (7)
- (-) Space Exploration (2)
- 3-D Printing/Advanced Manufacturing (4)
- Biology (2)
- Biomedical (4)
- Chemical Sciences (1)
- Climate Change (1)
- Composites (2)
- Computer Science (3)
- Coronavirus (1)
- Critical Materials (1)
- Energy Storage (1)
- Frontier (1)
- Fusion (3)
- ITER (1)
- Materials (6)
- Materials Science (9)
- Nanotechnology (11)
- Neutron Science (16)
- Nuclear Energy (1)
- Physics (5)
- Polymers (2)
- Quantum Computing (1)
- Quantum Science (3)
- Transportation (1)
Media Contacts
A world-leading researcher in solid electrolytes and sophisticated electron microscopy methods received Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s top science honor today for her work in developing new materials for batteries. The announcement was made during a livestreamed Director’s Awards event hosted by ORNL Director Thomas Zacharia.
Ten scientists from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory are among the world’s most highly cited researchers, according to a bibliometric analysis conducted by the scientific publication analytics firm Clarivate.
ORNL's Larry Baylor and Andrew Lupini have been elected fellows of the American Physical Society.
Researchers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory successfully created amorphous ice, similar to ice in interstellar space and on icy worlds in our solar system. They documented that its disordered atomic behavior is unlike any ice on Earth.
Sergei Kalinin, a scientist and inventor at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has been elected a fellow of the Microscopy Society of America professional society.
Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have created a recipe for a renewable 3D printing feedstock that could spur a profitable new use for an intractable biorefinery byproduct: lignin.
Physicists turned to the “doubly magic” tin isotope Sn-132, colliding it with a target at Oak Ridge National Laboratory to assess its properties as it lost a neutron to become Sn-131.
Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory used neutrons, isotopes and simulations to “see” the atomic structure of a saturated solution and found evidence supporting one of two competing hypotheses about how ions come
An Oak Ridge National Laboratory-led team used a scanning transmission electron microscope to selectively position single atoms below a crystal’s surface for the first time.
Sergei Kalinin of the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory knows that seeing something is not the same as understanding it. As director of ORNL’s Institute for Functional Imaging of Materials, he convenes experts in microscopy and computing to gain scientific insigh...