Feature Articles
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 29-May-2026 12:15 ET (29-May-2026 16:15 GMT/UTC)
27-Apr-2022
Argonne and Parallel Works win highest honor from Federal Laboratory Consortium for Excellence in Technology Transfer
DOE/Argonne National Laboratory
Argonne National Laboratory and Parallel Works, Inc., won the 2022 Federal Laboratory Consortium’s (FLC) National Award for Excellence in Technology Transfer for their effort to bring Machine Learning–Genetic Algorithm software to commercialization.
26-Apr-2022
Smart lighting controls primed for data mining
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
The smarter our buildings become, the more data they generate. Lighting controls data, in particular, could prove valuable for facilities managers, manufacturers, and lighting designers. But as valuable as the data are, the buildings industry is still learning how to interpret and leverage the data.
- Journal
- Energy and Buildings
- Funder
- U.S. Department of Energy
26-Apr-2022
Different particles get different treatment inside nuclei
DOE/Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
For nearly four decades, scientists have known that protons and neutrons cozily bundled up inside an atom’s nucleus are different from those roaming free in the cold emptiness of space. Now, for the first time, nuclear physicists at the Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility have shown that while both particles are altered by their residence inside a nucleus, they may be affected differently.
- Journal
- Physical Review Letters
- Funder
- University of Adelaide, Australian Research Council
25-Apr-2022
Los Alamos National Laboratory names Evelyn Mullen new executive officer for Weapons
DOE/Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos National Laboratory this week announced the selection of Evelyn Mullen as the new executive officer of the Weapons directorate, effective April 25.
25-Apr-2022
Seeking energy frontiers
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Morris Bullock has led PNNL's pursuit of the efficient conversion of electrical energy and chemical bonds through control of electron and proton transfers.
21-Apr-2022
The cycle of light: Analyzing how cellular proteins in leaves change through day, night
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Because next-generation biofuels will depend on the growth and hardiness of woody feedstocks, scientists have sought to better understand how leaf cells quickly respond to environmental cues such as light, temperature and water. Scientists at the Center for Bioenergy Innovation, or CBI, have studied rapid molecular changes in leaves from poplar trees during normal daily cycles of daylight and darkness. Until now, the effect of these modifications at the cellular protein level was not well understood, partly because of the technical limitations of the analytical tools available.
- Journal
- PROTEOMICS
20-Apr-2022
ORNL brings big science to address the climate challenge
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Tackling the climate crisis and achieving an equitable clean energy future are among the biggest challenges of our time. Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the largest Department of Energy science and energy laboratory in the country, is deeply invested in the big science capabilities and expertise needed to address the climate challenge on multiple fronts.
20-Apr-2022
Lowering the temperature on a hot topic: A climate change primer
DOE/Argonne National Laboratory
Earth Day presents a good opportunity to help clear up some essential questions about climate change; what it is, what is responsible and how we know it’s real.
20-Apr-2022
Scientists build microporous MOF traps for mitigating toxic gases
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Researchers from Sandia, ORNL, and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville used neutron scattering and additional experimental techniques to study a series of materials called metal organic frameworks (MOFs) made from the entire list of rare earth elements. The researchers established a comprehensive approach to evaluating large numbers of MOFs and also made an important discovery about a defect that can be useful in building technologies to mitigate toxic gases such as nitrogen and sulfur dioxides.
- Journal
- ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces