Filter News
Area of Research
News Type
News Topics
- (-) Biomedical (4)
- (-) Climate Change (3)
- (-) Grid (5)
- (-) Nuclear Energy (6)
- (-) Security (2)
- (-) Space Exploration (1)
- (-) Transformational Challenge Reactor (2)
- 3-D Printing/Advanced Manufacturing (15)
- Advanced Reactors (3)
- Artificial Intelligence (3)
- Big Data (4)
- Bioenergy (4)
- Biology (2)
- Chemical Sciences (2)
- Clean Water (1)
- Composites (1)
- Computer Science (10)
- Coronavirus (7)
- Cybersecurity (3)
- Energy Storage (10)
- Environment (12)
- Exascale Computing (1)
- Fusion (1)
- High-Performance Computing (1)
- Isotopes (3)
- Machine Learning (3)
- Materials (2)
- Materials Science (18)
- Mathematics (2)
- Microscopy (3)
- Molten Salt (1)
- Nanotechnology (8)
- National Security (1)
- Neutron Science (7)
- Physics (7)
- Polymers (3)
- Quantum Science (1)
- Summit (2)
- Sustainable Energy (6)
- Transportation (9)
Media Contacts
Six ORNL scientists have been elected as fellows to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, or AAAS.
Planning for a digitized, sustainable smart power grid is a challenge to which Suman Debnath is using not only his own applied mathematics expertise, but also the wider communal knowledge made possible by his revival of a local chapter of the IEEE professional society.
The Transformational Challenge Reactor, or TCR, a microreactor built using 3D printing and other new advanced technologies, could be operational by 2024.
Four research teams from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory and their technologies have received 2020 R&D 100 Awards.
About 60 years ago, scientists discovered that a certain rare earth metal-hydrogen mixture, yttrium, could be the ideal moderator to go inside small, gas-cooled nuclear reactors.
ORNL researchers have developed an intelligent power electronic inverter platform that can connect locally sited energy resources such as solar panels, energy storage and electric vehicles and smoothly interact with the utility power grid.
Ada Sedova’s journey to Oak Ridge National Laboratory has taken her on the path from pre-med studies in college to an accelerated graduate career in mathematics and biophysics and now to the intersection of computational science and biology
In the search to create materials that can withstand extreme radiation, Yanwen Zhang, a researcher at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, says that materials scientists must think outside the box.
Giri Prakash, data informatics scientist and director of the Department of Energy’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Data Center at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has accepted an invitation from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to serve a four-year term on the U.S. National Committee for CODATA.
Temperatures hotter than the center of the sun. Magnetic fields hundreds of thousands of times stronger than the earth’s. Neutrons energetic enough to change the structure of a material entirely.