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CMI project lead Durga Paudyal mentors Iowa State University doctoral student Gavin Nop, DOE SCGSR Awardee
System Support Specialist, Information Technology
The Newsletter for Ames National Laboratory employees
For a company in Florida, a simple internet search for information that could help him extract high-value minerals from used cellphones and laptops led to a connection at Idaho National Laboratory, then with DOE’s Energy I-Corps program and help through the lab’s Technical Assistance Program (TAP).
CMI Team member Marshallton Research Laboratories worked with CMI researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Idaho National Laboratory to develop a technology to help separate rare earth elements. Marshallton licensed the technology, and now is working on what comes next.
Millions of people across the world do it before going to bed every night: brush their teeth with toothpaste. Most of them give little thought to the product, but there is a lot of minty-fresh science packed into that tube. So much so, in fact, that Ames National Laboratory has partnered with the Colgate-Palmolive Company to help them improve toothpaste's main active ingredient: fluoride.
STEM and poetry come together in this first of its kind contest at Ames National Laboratory
CMI Team members presented at one of the world’s leading research conferences focused on carbon and coal-to-products research. The Ramaco Research Rodeo v3.0 (R3) was hosted by Sheridan-based carbon technology and critical minerals company Ramaco Carbon with the International Centre for Sustainable Carbon, a technology collaboration program sponsored by the Paris-based International Energy Agency.
Historical archive page of the CMI Open Innovation Project (OIP) 2020. This solicitation is closed.
Cal State LA has received a $750,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to provide more research and training opportunities in STEM fields for students while addressing important energy and climate challenges. The three-year grant project is a collaboration between Cal State LA and the Ames National Laboratory called “Designing Photoresponsive Nanosponges for Efficient and Reversible Capture and Release of Carbon Dioxide.”