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January 13, 2016
The College of Engineering has again climbed in the 2016 U.S. News and World Report rankings. Drexel is ranked 24th in the nation in the “Best Online Graduate Engineering Programs,” up 5 places from the previous year. These are the highest rankings ever received for the College of Engineering’s online graduate programs and mark the 4th consecutive year that the online graduate programs have been recognized by U.S. News and World Report as among the best in the country.
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January 13, 2016
“The manufacturing of pharmaceutical tablets: A ‘simple’ task of immense complexity” is the topic of 2015-2016 Albert Sauveur Lecture Awardee A.W. Grosvenor Professor Antonios Zavaliangos.
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January 12, 2016
The Chemical and Biological Engineering Department is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2015 CBE Awards:
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January 12, 2016
We are pleased to announce the recipients of the following graduate student award:
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January 11, 2016
Yury Gogotsi, Ph.D., Distinguished University and Trustee Chair Professor of the Materials Science and Engineering department, has been admitted as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), a professional society based in the United Kingdom with over 50,000 members worldwide.
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January 08, 2016
Yury Gogotsi, Distinguished University and Trustee Chair Professor, has been admitted as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), a professional society based in the United Kingdom with over 50,000 members worldwide.
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January 07, 2016
A blob of algae scooped from a fountain on South Street almost two years ago, has seeded a crop of the green stuff that Drexel University researchers claim is more effective at treating wastewater than many of the processes employed in municipal facilities today. The algae is a functional ingredient of a bioreactor system designed by Drexel environmental engineers to remove several chemicals from wastewater at once — shortcutting a process that normally takes multiple steps, expensive ingredients, and a great deal of time.
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January 05, 2016
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January 05, 2016
A blob of algae scooped from a fountain on South Street almost two years ago, has seeded a crop of the green stuff that Drexel University researchers claim is more effective at treating wastewater than many of the processes employed in municipal facilities today. The algae is a functional ingredient of a bioreactor system designed by Drexel environmental engineers to remove several chemicals from wastewater at once — shortcutting a process that normally takes multiple steps, expensive ingredients, and a great deal of time.
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January 05, 2016
PhD student Ariana Levitt has been named a Coulter Fellow for 2016.
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