As a Tar Heel, Alexis Glaudin found her passion for physical chemistry and research. She'll now be heading to the University of Washington to pursue a Ph.D. in chemistry.
Wednesday, May 12, 2021 - 11:24 am
POTSDAM Clarkson University Professor Devon Shipp has been awarded the Clarkson Award for Excellence in Research & Scholarship.
The Clarkson Award for Excellence in Research & Scholarship is granted annually to recognize research by a tenured faculty member who has had a significant impact on his or her chosen field of study.
Shipp has recently been recognized as a pioneering investigator by the journal Polymer Chemistry, a leading peer-reviewed journal in the polymer field published by the Royal Society of Chemistry (U.K.).
Professor Shipp has been at Clarkson since 1999. He was Chair of the Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular Science from 2015 until his appointment as CAMP Director in 2020. He is an internationally renowned scholar and student mentor, his research group has garnered multiple American Chemical Society research awards, a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, and three Goldwater Sch
Wednesday, May 12, 2021 - 11:59 am
POTSDAM Clarkson University Professor Devon Shipp has been awarded the Clarkson Award for Excellence in Research & Scholarship.
The award is granted annually to recognize research by a tenured faculty member who has had a significant impact on his or her chosen field of study.
Shipp was recently recognized as a pioneering investigator by the journal Polymer Chemistry, a leading peer-reviewed journal in the polymer field published by the Royal Society of Chemistry.
Professor Shipp has been at Clarkson since 1999. He was chair of the Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular Science from 2015 until his appointment as CAMP director in 2020. He is an internationally renowned scholar and student mentor, his research group has garnered multiple American Chemical Society research awards, a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, and three Goldwater Scholarships. Shipp supports his discipline through service as an
She wants to make more efficient batteries without exploiting cobalt miners Sydney Morris, who studies chemical engineering, wants to make powerful batteries without cobalt, an expensive and unsustainable rare earth mineral that’s often mined by children. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University by Emily Arntsen - contributor May 10, 2021
Twitter 0% More stories
The origin of an electric vehicle begins not on the assembly line, but hundreds of feet underground in a dimly lit tunnel somewhere in the mineral-rich region of central Africa, where miners score the earth in search of cobalt, a key ingredient for the batteries that power these vehicles.
E-Mail
IMAGE: Unlike daily weather, global prevailing wind patterns are believed to be relatively stable over millennial timescales. A new study finds that these wind currents have helped shape genetic diversity in. view more
Credit: Matthew Kling, UC Berkeley
Berkeley Forests ability to survive and adapt to the disruptions wrought by climate change may depend, in part, on the eddies and swirls of global wind currents, suggests a new study by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley.
Unlike animals, the trees that make up our planet s forests can t uproot and find new terrain if conditions get tough. Instead, many trees produce seeds and pollen that are designed to be carried away by the wind, an adaptation that helps them colonize new territories and maximize how far they can spread their genes.