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Two New York state companies have been chosen to participate this spring in the Cornell Center for Materials Research (CCMR) JumpStart Program, through.
February 3, 2021
Researchers from Cornell and Northwestern University have devised a new method of using extracts derived from bioengineered bacteria to create vaccines that protect against life-threatening infections caused by pathogenic bacteria.
Because the technology can be easily reconfigured for different pathogenic foes and freeze-dried for portability and refrigeration-free storage, it could be a game-changing approach to fighting infection, especially in locations where access to such medicines is limited. Provided
A collaboration between Cornell and Northwestern University has led to the creation of iVAX, which uses extracts derived from bioengineered bacteria to create shelf-stable vaccines on demand.
The team’s paper, “On-Demand Biomanufacturing of Protective Conjugate Vaccines,” published Feb. 3 in Science Advances. The paper’s co-lead authors are Jessica Stark ’12, now a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University, and doctoral student Thapakor
Date Time
Dimensional Energy emerges as $20M Carbon X Prize finalist
Dimensional Energy – a Cornell McGovern Center startup company that can capture industrial carbon dioxide and then convert it by way of sunshine into an environmentally friendly products like aviation fuel – has emerged as one of two finalists in the $20 million Carbon X Prize competition.
The contest’s winner will be announced this summer.
After developing small-scale models on the laboratory bench at the McGovern Center, Dimensional Energy brought their pilot reactor to Gillette, Wyoming, last fall for a long stretch of scaled-up testing. The group successfully demonstrated their technology with a 10-ton per year scale proof-of-concept solar fuels reactor that can turn carbon dioxide into a carbon-neutral fuel.
December 17, 2020
By delving into scientific, technological, environmental and economic data, Cornell Engineering researchers have examined whether New York could achieve a statewide carbon-free economy by 2050.
Their finding: Yes, New York can reach this goal – and do it with five years to spare.
Fengqi You, the Roxanne E. and Michael J. Zak Professor in Energy Systems Engineering and a Croll Sesquicentennial Fellow in the Smith School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, and Ning Zhao, a doctoral student in the Process-Energy-Environmental Systems Engineering (PEESE) lab, examined a variety of carbon-neutral energy systems and decarbonization methods after the state passed the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) in July 2019.