Led by Assefaw Gebremedhin, a WSU research team has received a $1.2 million U.S. Department of Education grant to train graduate students at the intersection of artificial intelligence, data science, and engineering to address challenges of the future electric power grid.
Researchers in the Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering helped develop a test that determines antibiotic resistance in less than 90 minutes.
Todd Vanek has been named president of the Council of Engineering Management Academic Leaders.
The Everett Herald highlighted Jacob Murray for his work in a new program between WSU Everett, Clemson University and Boeing that prepares college students for careers in aerospace
Trimble and Washington State University have established a state-of-the-art Technology Lab.
Anamika Dubey received the WSU Research Week Faculty Pacesetter Award: Physical Sciences and Engineering for her research in optimization and control of electric power distribution systems with a focus on integration of grid-edge technologies.
A new catalyst developed in part by WSU researchers do a better job than current technology for cleaning up emissions from natural gas engines, as reported in Nature Catalysis.
A WSU team, led by Omar Al-Hassawi, received a 3-year, $750,000 grant to develop a curriculum for building science certificates and a degree focused on energy-efficient housing.
Abdelrhman Mohamed and Haluk Beyenal were featured in WIRED Magazine for their research that measures the health of soil by measuring electric currents produced by microbes.
Anti-icing technology developed at Washington State University is being licensed by Fusione Corp., a Massachusetts-based snow and ice operations company, with the goal of creating environmentally responsible and sustainable snow and ice road treatments.
Julia Day and her building research are featured this week by the WSU Foundation.
Yuehe Lin and Shichao Ding helped develop a low-cost sensor that can detect and accurately measure the amount of the widely used and controversial herbicide, glyphosate, in droplets of liquid in a laboratory test.
Graduate student Nas Cardwell received second place on presenting “Capturing the Coverage Dependence of Aromatics via Mean-Field Models” at the PNWAVS 2021 meeting.