Claire Ely and Delaney McNally

Two ChBE students earn prestigious Goldwater Scholarships

April 22, 2024

Chemical and Biological Engineering students Claire Ely and Delaney McNally are among 438 college students from across the United States in 2024 to be awarded Goldwater Scholarships, which reward sophomores and juniors who are actively conducting research in math, science and engineering.

Congratulations to our 2024 ChBE department undergraduate award-winners!

April 18, 2024

The Chemical and Biological Engineering Department awards recognize students in the department who have excelled in one or more areas. Winners are selected by the department’s Undergraduate Awards Committee.

NSF GFRP banner

Six chemical and biological engineering students earn major NSF fellowships

April 5, 2024

Five chemical and biological engineering graduate students and one ChBE undergraduate student have received 2024 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships, a prestigious award that recognizes and supports outstanding students in a wide variety of science-related disciplines.

Dave Clough

Retired professor’s passion rooted in academic engagement

April 3, 2024

Since retiring in 2017 from CU Boulder’s Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Professor Dave Clough has collaborated on three textbooks. He’s also regularly involved with students, participating in PhD committees and undergraduate activities alike.

ChBE seniors take home more than one quarter of CEAS graduating student awards

April 2, 2024

Eight graduating seniors from the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering earned 10 Graduating Student Awards from the College of Engineering and Applied Science this year. Some shared their thoughts about their experiences at CU Boulder. “Our students are performing cutting-edge research, helping their peers as course assistants and student...

Single molecule/nanoparticle tracking microscopy is used to study transport in the liquid-filled void spaces of porous materials.

Dan Schwartz awarded prestigious American Chemical Society Langmuir Lectureship

April 2, 2024

Professor Daniel K. Schwartz has been honored with the prestigious American Chemical Society (ACS) Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry 2024 Langmuir Lectureship award. He was nominated by his colleagues for significant contributions to the field of colloid and interface science.

Professor Stephanie Bryant speaking in a video about the project.

Joints that could heal themselves? Researchers could get there in five years

March 26, 2024

The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) granted $39 million to a CU Boulder-led team, including Professor Stephanie J. Bryant of chemical and biological engineering, to pioneer a single-shot joint treatment, that would stop cartilage and bone from erosion and promote regrowth.

Jerome Fox

Jerome Fox elevated to senior member of prestigious National Academy of Inventors

March 25, 2024

Jerome Fox, an associate professor at the University of Colorado Boulder, has been named a senior member of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI). Fox's research focuses on engineering microbes for drug discovery. He founded Think Bioscience, a company developing medicines for conditions like Rett Syndrome and cancer.

Michael Mcgehee

Researchers take major step toward developing next-generation solar cells

March 22, 2024

In a new paper published February 26 in the journal Nature Energy, Michael McGehee, a professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, and his international collaborators unveiled an innovative method to manufacture new solar cells, known as perovskite cells, an achievement critical for the commercialization of what many consider the next generation of solar technology.

Kaustav Bera with the mountains blurred in the background

CU Boulder postdoc earns biomedical fellowship for intestine research

March 13, 2024

Kaustav Bera, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, was awarded a three-year postdoctoral fellowship from the Helen Hay Whitney Foundation. The highly prestigious and very selective fellowship—less than 5 percent of applications are awarded—will support Bera’s postdoctoral training in studying the body’s maintenance of the gut epithelium, the inner lining of the gastrointestinal tract.

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