UT-Battelle, which manages Oak Ridge National Laboratory for the Department of Energy, celebrated exceptional achievements in ...
The National Neutron Scattering School, held earlier this fall at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, welcomed 50 graduate students and postdoctoral researchers chosen from a highly competitive pool of ...
Five simulation projects run on the ORNL Frontier supercomputer have been named finalists for the Gordon Bell Prize. Credit: ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy Five breakthrough simulation projects conducted ...
The impacts of science from HFIR include the development of medical isotopes and elements for the periodic table, fuels and ...
The innovative Celeritas project, led by the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, provides a software tool that makes sure simulations used to analyze particles can run on the fastest ...
Gerald “Jerry” Tuskan, director of the Department of Energy Center for Bioenergy Innovation and ORNL Corporate Fellow, ...
A team of researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory demonstrated that a light-duty passenger electric vehicle can be wirelessly charged at 100-kW with 96% efficiency using polyphase electromagnetic ...
ORNL creates the mathematics and architecture-aware algorithms that harness machines, ideas, and data, enabling far-reaching scientific breakthroughs. These capabilities span foundational aspects of ...
Researchers Sang-Ho Kim, An-Ping Li, Bronson Messer and Zac Ward of ORNL have been named Fellows of the American Physical Society in recognition of their outstanding impact in their respective fields.
Bio-SANS is a Biological Small-Angle Neutron Scattering instrument that uses neutrons to study the structure and function of complex biological materials with high precision. As part of the Center for ...
The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, NVIDIA, and HPE will seek to open new insights into quantum computing and identify potential strategies toward the integration of quantum, ...
Chemists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have invented a more efficient way to extract lithium from waste liquids leached from mining sites, oil fields and used batteries.