• A Day in the Life of a Co-op

      February 01, 2018

      Most people know about Drexel’s celebrated cooperative program, in which students fulfill six-month internships to see how they like the work. But what, exactly, is that work? What does a co-op student do all day? What are the tasks assigned? And what time is lunch?

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    • A High(er)-Definition Nose — Drexel's MXene Material Could Improve Sensors That Sniff

      February 01, 2018

      Sensors that sniff out chemicals in the air to warn us about everything from fires to carbon monoxide to drunk drivers to explosive devices hidden in luggage have improved so much that they can even detect diseases on a person’s breath. Researchers from Drexel University and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology have made a discovery that could make our best “chemical noses” even more sensitive.

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    • Compress it, Watch it Expand

      January 31, 2018

      Researchers in Michel Barsoum's Layered Solids Group discovered MXenes unexpectedly expand when compressed in the presence of water. This will contribute to a better understanding of how MXenes can be processed and opens a new avenue of study surrounding them.

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    • Valerie Niemann, Fulbright Semi-Finalist

      January 31, 2018

      Congratulations to Valerie Niemann, CBE senior, on being selected as a semi-finalist for a Fulbright Study/Research grant to Switzerland! As a semi-finalist, Valerie has been chosen by the Fulbright U.S. National Screening Committees as among the top of approximately 10,000 applicants nationwide, and her application has been passed to the host country for final selection in the coming months. This is quite an achievement and we are delighted for her to advance to the next stage!

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    • Department of Chemical Engineering Hosts 5th Annual Alumni Event

      January 30, 2018

      On Saturday, October 7, 2017, the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering hosted its fifth Alumni Annual Event. CBE has been taking the initiative to reunite alumni with the department, while creating a community among students, faculty, and alumni.

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    • CBE Participates in AIChE Delaware Valley Section Poster Symposium

      January 30, 2018

      The symposium, hosted by FMC in University City, focused on sustainability with a variety of posters from local chemical engineering students focused on batteries, seaweed, composites, films, plant based materials and nanofibers.

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    • 'Chemical Net' Could be Key to Capturing Pure Hydrogen

      January 29, 2018

      Hydrogen is one of the most abundant elements on Earth and an exceptionally clean fuel source. While it is making its way into the fuel cells of electric cars, busses and heavy equipment, its widespread use is hampered by the expensive gas-separation process required to produce pure hydrogen. But that process could soon become more efficient and cost-effective thanks to a discovery by an international team of researchers, led in the U.S. by Drexel University. The group has uncovered exceptionally efficient gas separation properties in a nanomaterial called MXene that could be incorporated into the membranes used to purify hydrogen.

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    • Drexel Hosts IoT Meet-Up in Wireless Systems Lab

      January 22, 2018

      How do ideas from “The Terminator” make their way into new technology for WiFi access points? How can augmented reality be used to visualize how wireless signals travel to help with both education and research? How are exciting new Drexel facilities, with advanced radio testbeds and sensor technologies, enabling exciting new applications in the developing Internet of Things (IoT)?

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    • Morss Clyne Receives $1.9 million R01 Grant from the NIH

      January 19, 2018

      In a perfect world, blood vessels would run straight as freeways, channeling blood consistently and efficiently through the human body. Instead, they switch directions or branch off like country paths as they wend through the circulatory system, and each of those junctures impacts blood flow. In turn, blood flow impacts, among other things, the way glucose is metabolized in vascular cells, with implications for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other vascular pathologies. Scientists don’t know exactly why this occurs.

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    • Professor Simi Hoque to be honored at Girls, Inc. 2018 Strong, Smart, and Bold Breakfast

      January 17, 2018

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