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Researcher
- Brian Post
- Sudarsanam Babu
- William Carter
- Alex Roschli
- Andrzej Nycz
- Blane Fillingim
- Chris Masuo
- Hongbin Sun
- Lauren Heinrich
- Luke Meyer
- Peeyush Nandwana
- Prashant Jain
- Thomas Feldhausen
- Yousub Lee
- Adam Stevens
- Alex Walters
- Amy Elliott
- Cameron Adkins
- Erin Webb
- Evin Carter
- Ian Greenquist
- Ilias Belharouak
- Isha Bhandari
- Jeremy Malmstead
- Joshua Vaughan
- Kitty K Mccracken
- Liam White
- Michael Borish
- Nate See
- Nithin Panicker
- Oluwafemi Oyedeji
- Peter Wang
- Pradeep Ramuhalli
- Praveen Cheekatamarla
- Ramanan Sankaran
- Rangasayee Kannan
- Roger G Miller
- Ruhul Amin
- Ryan Dehoff
- Sarah Graham
- Soydan Ozcan
- Tyler Smith
- Vimal Ramanuj
- Vishaldeep Sharma
- Vittorio Badalassi
- Wenjun Ge
- William Peter
- Xianhui Zhao
- Yukinori Yamamoto

The invention presented here addresses key challenges associated with counterfeit refrigerants by ensuring safety, maintaining system performance, supporting environmental compliance, and mitigating health and legal risks.

The use of biomass fiber reinforcement for polymer composite applications, like those in buildings or automotive, has expanded rapidly due to the low cost, high stiffness, and inherent renewability of these materials. Biomass are commonly disposed of as waste.

A novel approach is presented herein to improve time to onset of natural convection stemming from fuel element porosity during a failure mode of a nuclear reactor.

This work seeks to alter the interface condition through thermal history modification, deposition energy density, and interface surface preparation to prevent interface cracking.

Additive manufacturing (AM) enables the incremental buildup of monolithic components with a variety of materials, and material deposition locations.

Recent advances in magnetic fusion (tokamak) technology have attracted billions of dollars of investments in startups from venture capitals and corporations to develop devices demonstrating net energy gain in a self-heated burning plasma, such as SPARC (under construction) and

Ceramic matrix composites are used in several industries, such as aerospace, for lightweight, high quality and high strength materials. But producing them is time consuming and often low quality.