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Researcher
- Ilias Belharouak
- Ali Abouimrane
- Hongbin Sun
- Mike Zach
- Prashant Jain
- Ruhul Amin
- Andrew F May
- Ben Garrison
- Brad Johnson
- Bruce Moyer
- Charlie Cook
- Christopher Hershey
- Craig Blue
- Daniel Rasmussen
- David L Wood III
- Debjani Pal
- Georgios Polyzos
- Hsin Wang
- Ian Greenquist
- James Klett
- Jaswinder Sharma
- Jeffrey Einkauf
- Jennifer M Pyles
- John Lindahl
- Junbin Choi
- Justin Griswold
- Kuntal De
- Laetitia H Delmau
- Luke Sadergaski
- Lu Yu
- Marm Dixit
- Nate See
- Nedim Cinbiz
- Nithin Panicker
- Padhraic L Mulligan
- Pradeep Ramuhalli
- Praveen Cheekatamarla
- Sandra Davern
- Tony Beard
- Vishaldeep Sharma
- Vittorio Badalassi
- Yaocai Bai
- Zhijia Du

Ruthenium is recovered from used nuclear fuel in an oxidizing environment by depositing the volatile RuO4 species onto a polymeric substrate.

The invention presented here addresses key challenges associated with counterfeit refrigerants by ensuring safety, maintaining system performance, supporting environmental compliance, and mitigating health and legal risks.

The ORNL invention addresses the challenge of poor mechanical properties of dry processed electrodes, improves their electrical properties, while improving their electrochemical performance.

A novel approach is presented herein to improve time to onset of natural convection stemming from fuel element porosity during a failure mode of a nuclear reactor.

The technologies provide a system and method of needling of veiled AS4 fabric tape.

Recent advances in magnetic fusion (tokamak) technology have attracted billions of dollars of investments in startups from venture capitals and corporations to develop devices demonstrating net energy gain in a self-heated burning plasma, such as SPARC (under construction) and

Spherical powders applied to nuclear targetry for isotope production will allow for enhanced heat transfer properties, tailored thermal conductivity and minimize time required for target fabrication and post processing.

ORNL will develop an advanced high-performing RTG using a novel radioisotope heat source.

ORNL has developed a new hydrothermal synthesis route to generate high quality battery cathode precursors. The new route offers excellent compositional control, homogenous spherical morphologies, and an ammonia-free co-precipitation process.