News

Categories:

Category: News

collaborating-for-cleantech_NEW
Collaborating for Clean Tech

January 24, 2020

MolE PhD student Ted Cohen shares how molecular engineering has opened new opportunities for collaboration. Cohen is a 4th year molecular engineering Ph.D. student co-advised by Professor of Chemistry Daniel Gamelin and Professors of Materials Science & Engineering Christine Luscombe and Devin Mackenzie. [...]

Read More... from Collaborating for Clean Tech

Elizabeth Nance in the Lab
PECASE Honoree Elizabeth Nance highlights the importance of collaboration in nanotechnology

November 24, 2019

Elizabeth Nance, an assistant professor of chemical engineering at the University of Washington in Seattle and a recent recipient of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), focuses her research on understanding the barriers in the brain and other cell- and tissue-based barriers in the body to see how nanoparticles interact with them. [...]

Read More... from PECASE Honoree Elizabeth Nance highlights the importance of collaboration in nanotechnology

lillipop_NEW
Team uses golden "˜lollipop' to observe elusive interference effect at the nanoscale

November 7, 2019

A team led by MolES faculty member David Masiello and scientists from the University of Notre Dame used recent advances in electron microscopy to observe Fano interferences "” a form of quantum-mechanical interference by electrons "” directly in a pair of metallic nanoparticles. [...]

Read More... from Team uses golden "˜lollipop' to observe elusive interference effect at the nanoscale

tractor-beam_NEW
Light-based "˜tractor beam' assembles materials at the nanoscale

November 4, 2019

A team led by MolES faculty member Peter Pauzauskie, a professor of materials science and engineering, has developed a method that could make reproducible manufacturing at the nanoscale possible. The team adapted a light-based technology employed widely in biology "” known as optical traps or optical tweezers "” to operate in a water-free liquid environment of carbon-rich organic solvents, thereby enabling new potential applications. [...]

Read More... from Light-based "˜tractor beam' assembles materials at the nanoscale

new-technique_NEW
New technique lets researchers map strain in next-gen solar cells

October 31, 2019

A team led by David Ginger, professor of chemistry and MolES faculty member, has developed a way to map strain in lead halide perovskite solar cells. Their approach shows that misorientation between microscopic perovskite crystals is the primary contributor to the buildup of strain within the solar cell, which creates small-scale defects in the grain structure, interrupts the transport of electrons within the solar cell, and ultimately leads to heat loss through a process known as non-radiative recombination. [...]

Read More... from New technique lets researchers map strain in next-gen solar cells

mestasurface_NEW
New metasurface design can control optical fields in three dimensions

October 4, 2019

A team led by MolES faculty member Arka Majumdar, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and physics, has designed and tested a 3D-printed metamaterial that can manipulate light with nanoscale precision. As they report in a paper published October 4 in the journal Science Advances, their designed optical element focuses light to discrete points in a 3D helical pattern. [...]

Read More... from New metasurface design can control optical fields in three dimensions

Carothers gray background
Research team receives NSF award to develop "˜smart' synthetic cell systems

September 24, 2019

An interdisciplinary research team led by MolES faculty member James Carothers, Dan Evans Career Development Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering, received a new $1 million research grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to investigate whether cells can learn. [...]

Read More... from Research team receives NSF award to develop "˜smart' synthetic cell systems

2019_YFA_Cobb
Corie L. Cobb receives DARPA Young Faculty Award

September 12, 2019

Corie L. Cobb, Washington Research Foundation Innovation Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering and Clean Energy, is the recipient of a 2019 Young Faculty Award from the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). [...]

Read More... from Corie L. Cobb receives DARPA Young Faculty Award

Cell with nucleus in mitosis and multiplication of cells
A New Clue to How Life Originated

August 12, 2019

A new study published in PNAS from the lab of Sarah Keller, MolES faculty member and UW professor of chemistry, was recently featured in The Atlantic. [...]

Read More... from A New Clue to How Life Originated

equations-drawn-TILE-750x448
Scientists can now control thermal profiles at the nanoscale

August 9, 2019

In a paper published online July 30 by the journal ACS Nano, David Masiello, MolES faculty member and professor of chemistry, and colleagues from Rice University and Temple University, report a new breakthrough on controlling the thermal profiles of materials at the nanoscale. The team of researchers designed and tested an experimental system that uses a near-infrared laser to actively heat two gold nanorod antennae "” metal rods designed and built at the nanoscale "” to different temperatures. The nanorods are so close together that they are both electromagnetically and thermally coupled. Yet the team measured temperature differences between the rods as high as 20 degrees Celsius. By simply changing the wavelength of the laser, they could also change which nanorod was cooler and which was warmer, even though the rods were made of the same material. [...]

Read More... from Scientists can now control thermal profiles at the nanoscale

nanoARPES-750x436
First-ever visualizations of electrical gating effects on electronic structure could lead to longer-lasting devices

July 17, 2019

For the first time, scientists have visualized the electronic structure in a microelectronic device, opening up opportunities for finely tuned, high-performance electronic devices. UW physicists David Cobden and Xaiodong Xu, in collaboration with colleagues at the University of Warwick, developed a technique to measure the energy and momentum of electrons in operating microelectronic devices made of atomically thin "” so-called 2D "” materials. Their findings, published last week in the journal Nature could lead to new, finely tuned, high performance electronic devices. [...]

Read More... from First-ever visualizations of electrical gating effects on electronic structure could lead to longer-lasting devices

Faculty Field Tour Portraits
Elizabeth Nance is one of six UW professors to a receive 2019 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists & Engineers

July 9, 2019

The award, also known as the PECASE, is the highest honor given by the U.S. government to early-career scientists and engineers "who show exceptional promise for leadership in science and technology." [...]

Read More... from Elizabeth Nance is one of six UW professors to a receive 2019 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists & Engineers

2019-Hao-Shen-Graduates_jumping-1
Hail to the fiber king

June 26, 2019

Hao Shen pioneered the creation of self-assembling protein fibers from scratch in the lab of UW Biochemistry professor David Baker. Hao was part of our first cohort of students and is the first student to receive a PhD in molecular engineering from the University of Washington. Read more about Hao's scientific journey! [...]

Read More... from Hail to the fiber king

2018_10_24_MAF Microscope-SIMS
MAF to host biomedical characterization workshop July 29-31

May 23, 2019

Workshop attendees will learn the nuts and bolts of surface characterization including commonly used methods and data analysis techniques. Lectures are accompanied by demonstrations on MAF instruments to provide attendees with a better understanding of the materials covered in workshop lectures. [...]

Read More... from MAF to host biomedical characterization workshop July 29-31

Molecular Engineering and Sciences Institute
Scientists use molecular tethers and chemical "˜light sabers' to construct platforms for tissue engineering

May 20, 2019

In a paper published May 20 in the journal Nature Materials, a research team led by MolES faculty member Cole DeForest unveiled a new strategy to keep proteins intact and functional in synthetic biomaterials for tissue engineering. Their approach modifies proteins at a specific point so that they can be chemically tethered to the scaffold using light. Since the tether can also be cut by laser light, this method can create evolving patterns of signal proteins throughout a biomaterial scaffold to grow tissues made up of different types of cells. [...]

Read More... from Scientists use molecular tethers and chemical "˜light sabers' to construct platforms for tissue engineering

Molecular Engineering and Sciences Institute
Breakthroughs in 3D organ printing detailed in Science Magazine

May 3, 2019

Bioengineers have cleared a major hurdle on the path to 3D printing replacement organs with a breakthrough technique for bioprinting tissues. A research team led by MolES faculty member Kelly Stevens, assistant professor of bioengineering and investigator at the UW Medicine Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, has created exquisitely entangled vascular networks that mimic the body's natural passageways for blood, air, lymph and other vital fluids. The team published its findings May 3 in the journal Science. Their research was also featured in Newsweek, Forbes, among other outlets. [...]

Read More... from Breakthroughs in 3D organ printing detailed in Science Magazine

2019 MolES COE Faculty Awardees 600X200
MolES Faculty recognized for excellence in research and education

April 24, 2019

Christine Luscombe, MolES Education Director and Campbell Career Development Endowed Professor of Materials Science & Engineering, received the 2019 College of Engineering Faculty Award in Research. MolES faculty members Arka Majumdar, Assistant Professor in Electrical & Computer Engineering and Physics, and Elizabeth Nance, Clare Boothe Luce Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, received Junior Faculty Awards in recognition of their leadership in research and education. [...]

Read More... from MolES Faculty recognized for excellence in research and education

019-Summer-MolES-Newsletter-Mosquito_500X500
MolES Director Pat Stayton developing targeted ‘radical cure’ for malaria

April 22, 2019

A research team led by University of Washington (UW) Distinguished Career Professor of Bioengineering and Molecular Engineering & Sciences (MolES) Institute Director Patrick Stayton has received a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to develop a new therapeutic for the radical cure (prevention of relapse) of malaria. [...]

Read More... from MolES Director Pat Stayton developing targeted ‘radical cure’ for malaria

Brain
Synthetic peptide can inhibit toxicity, aggregation of protein in Alzheimer's disease, researchers show

April 19, 2019

A team led by MolES faculty member and bioengineering Professor Valerie Daggett has developed synthetic peptides that target and inhibit the small, toxic protein aggregates that are thought to trigger Alzheimer's disease. Dylan Shea, a molecular engineering PhD student in the Daggett lab, was the lead author on a new paper describing these findings, published April 19 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [...]

Read More... from Synthetic peptide can inhibit toxicity, aggregation of protein in Alzheimer's disease, researchers show

Keller_Sarah
Sarah Keller receives 2019 Cottrell Scholars STAR Award

April 11, 2019

MolES faculty member and UW Chemistry Professor Sarah Keller received a 2019 Cottrell Scholars STAR (Science Teaching and Research) Award from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement. The STAR Award "recognizes the outstanding research and educational accomplishments of Cottrell Scholars." Congratulations! [...]

Read More... from Sarah Keller receives 2019 Cottrell Scholars STAR Award