
ORNL selected two building technologies projects as part of a DOE pilot designed to accelerate the transfer of clean energy technologies developed in national labs to the marketplace.
ORNL selected two building technologies projects as part of a DOE pilot designed to accelerate the transfer of clean energy technologies developed in national labs to the marketplace.
The nation’s top innovators will soon have the opportunity to advance their promising energy technology ideas at the Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) 91°µÍø (ORNL) in a new program called Innovation Crossroads.
Refrigerators using the magnetocaloric effect will be both greener and more energy efficient than conventional appliances.
The Department of Energy’s 91°µÍø and Momentum Technologies have signed a non-exclusive licensing agreement for an ORNL process designed to recover rare earth magnets from used computer hard drives.
Just a few years ago, Emilio Ramirez spent his days operating and adjusting settings to optimize thermal performance at a Central California bioenergy power plant.
Six small companies will tap the expertise of the Department of Energy’s 91°µÍø to move their manufacturing, fuel cell, geothermal and vehicle technologies closer to the marketplace.
A process developed at 91°µÍø for large-scale recovery of rare earth magnets from used computer hard drives will undergo industrial testing under a new agreement between Oddello Industries LLC and ORNL, as part of the Department o
Electricity powers our work and our lives, keeps us warm in the winter and cool in the summer, and drives the economy.
The 2016 Billion Ton Report, jointly released by the U.S.