A team led by Dr. Raymundo Arróyave has received $1.2 million from the U.S. Department of Energy to investigate a class of metals using data driven material discovery that can withstand higher operating temperatures.
In a new study, researchers in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering have described a new material that comes close to mimicking how brain cells perform computations.
Dr. Akhil Datta-Gupta is participating in a Department of Energy multi-university and national laboratory project to create an advanced machine-learning system that understands and renders oil and gas reservoir production processes and conditions as they happen.
Dr. Berna Hascakir is investigating pretreatment methods for heavily contaminated produced water so it can be reclaimed and used in hydraulic fracturing processes, saving millions of gallons of fresh water.
Using a bacterial strain found in mangroves, researchers at Texas A&M University have uncovered a low-cost, sustainable method for producing bioplastics from sewage sludge and wastewater.
Dr. Vanderlei Bagnato is testing a new cleaning method that may stop bacteria from spreading within endotracheal tubes, reducing the risk of patients getting hospital-acquired infections such as pneumonia.
Researchers from Texas A&M Engineering and the Ecole Nationale Superieure d'Arts et Métiers are collaborating to advance the science and technology for biocomposite manufacturing.
After creating a cross-domain, open-access data hub, Dr. Le Xie, his team and collaborators discovered the stark impact human mobility has had on the United States’ electricity markets during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dr. Duncan J. Maitland and Dr. Richard Miles from the Texas A&M University College of Engineering are among 175 scientists elected to the 2020 class of fellows by the National Academy of Inventors. The class of fellows will be inducted at the 2021 Fellows Induction Ceremony next June.
Texas A&M University is offering researchers a new flagship high-performance computing platform. Named in memory of programming pioneer Vice Admiral Grace Hopper, the Grace system will address a surge in on-campus demand for high-performance computing.
Researchers at Texas A&M University have fine-tuned the properties of a class of hydrogels so that they can hold on to glucose-sensing molecules more tightly while still allowing glucose to flow in and out.
Researchers at Texas A&M University have invented a high-throughput cell separation method that can be used in conjunction with droplet microfluidics. This technology facilitates more efficient screening assays for unraveling how pathogenic microbes interact with host cells that can eventually lead to new therapeutics.