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Released: 26-Oct-2015 10:05 PM EDT
National Infrastructure Simulation and Analysis Center taps PNNL
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

PNNL's data analytics capabilities and advanced computer modeling capabilities will support the Department of Homeland Security's National Infrastructure Simulation and Analysis Center.

Released: 26-Oct-2015 4:05 PM EDT
The Silent Treatment: EMSL’s Quiet Wing
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Scientists are advancing the understanding of biological and environmental systems by conducting at least part of their research in EMSL’s Quiet Wing, one of the most advanced quiet laboratories in the world for high-resolution imaging capabilities. Scientists are using this facility for a wide range of research areas, including: to study bacteria in complex soil aggregates, to understand the behavior of a unique multicopper oxidase and to explore remediation methods using porous clay.

Released: 21-Oct-2015 2:05 PM EDT
California 2100: More Frequent and More Severe Droughts and Floods Likely
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A study published in Nature Communications suggests that the weather patterns known as El Nino and La Nina could lead to at least a doubling of extreme droughts and floods in California later this century.

Released: 30-Sep-2015 12:05 PM EDT
Arizona State University and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Sign Agreement to Develop Solutions to Global Challenges
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A new memorandum of understanding between PNNL and Arizona State University formalizes the institutions' research collaboration on topics involving energy security, climate science and sustainability and other aspects of global security.

Released: 14-Sep-2015 6:05 PM EDT
Sandia's Young Named Deputy Director at PNNL
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Malin M. Young, a biochemist with extensive experience leading bioenergy and national security research programs, has been named deputy director for science and technology at PNNL.

Released: 8-Sep-2015 8:05 PM EDT
Making the Most From Carbon in Plants
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Researchers are looking for more effective ways to get at all the carbon in biomass to create more energy and biochemicals. However, a lot of the carbon is in lignin – support tissues in plants, which makes up about a third of the biomass. International teams of scientists are utilizing EMSL’s expertise and capabilities to better understand how lignin can be efficiently deconstructed to release its carbon for a more renewable and sustainable energy future

Released: 19-Aug-2015 8:00 PM EDT
PNNL to Tackle Future Grid Challenges Through New Facility, Capabilities
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

PNNL researchers and industry are now better equipped to tackle top challenges in grid modernization and buildings efficiency with the opening this week of the new Systems Engineering Building. The facility links real-time grid data, software platforms, specialized laboratories and advanced computing resources for the design and demonstration of new tools to modernize the grid and increase buildings energy efficiency.

Released: 3-Aug-2015 11:05 AM EDT
Power Grid Forecasting Tool Reduces Costly Errors
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

PNNL has developed a new tool to forecast for future energy needs that is up to 50 percent more accurate than several commonly used industry tools, showing potential to save millions in wasted electricity. The advancement was selected a 'best paper' at the IEEE Power & Energy general meeting.

Released: 29-Jul-2015 2:05 PM EDT
Playing 'Tag' with Pollution Lets Scientists See Who's It
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Using a climate model that can tag sources of soot and track where it lands, researchers have determined which areas around the Tibetan Plateau contribute the most soot -- and where. The model can also suggest the most effective way to reduce soot on the plateau, easing the amount of warming the region undergoes. The study, which appeared in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics in June, might help policy makers target pollution reduction efforts.

Released: 29-Jul-2015 11:00 AM EDT
Tiny Grains of Rice Hold Big Promise for Greenhouse Gas Reductions, Bioenergy
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Rice is the staple food for more than half of the world’s population, but the paddies it’s grown in contributes up to 17 percent of global methane emissions -- about 100 million tons a year. Now, with the addition of a single gene, rice can be cultivated to emit virtually no methane, more starch for a richer food source and biomass for energy production, as announced in the July 30 edition of Nature and online.

Released: 17-Jul-2015 5:05 PM EDT
How Clouds Get Their Brightness
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

How clouds form and how they help set the temperature of the earth are two of the big remaining questions in climate research. Now, a study of clouds over the world's remotest ocean shows that ocean life is responsible for up to half the cloud droplets that pop in and out of existence during summer.

Released: 10-Jul-2015 12:05 PM EDT
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to Help Small "Green" Businesses
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is named a lead laboratory for new DOE Pilot designed to give small clean energy firms more technology assistance from DOE labs.

Released: 9-Jul-2015 6:05 PM EDT
Smart Stuff: IQ of Northwest Power Grid Raised, Energy Saved
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Smart grid technologies and approaches can improve energy efficiency and possibly reduce power costs, according to the Pacific Northwest Smart Grid Demonstration Project’s final report.

Released: 6-Jul-2015 6:00 AM EDT
Aluminum Clusters Shut Down Molecular Fuel Factory
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

When aluminum atoms bunch up, porous materials called zeolites lose their ability to convert oil to gasoline. An international team of scientists created the first 3-D atomic map of a zeolite in order to find out how to improve catalysts used to produce fuel, biofuel and other chemicals.

Released: 29-Jun-2015 6:05 PM EDT
Magnetic Attraction
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Researchers studying a broad spectrum of science, including biofuel production processes, climate effects on carbon cycling in the soil and carbon transformations in the atmosphere will soon have access to EMSL’s new 21 Tesla Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer. Scientists are eager to start getting molecular-level information for their research, and six inaugural studies were selected to use the new instrument through a Special Science Call.

Released: 1-Jun-2015 12:05 PM EDT
Ray Named Director of Strategic Partnerships at PNNL
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

PNNL's long-time fundamental science research leader named to new partnership development post.

Released: 12-May-2015 4:05 PM EDT
Finding the Missing Particles
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

For the past 20 years, a large portion of the particles measured in the atmosphere were missing from models. At best, models were able to explain one-tenth of the carbon-rich secondary organic aerosols measured in the air. The problem turned out to be a series of fundamental assumptions used in the models due to a lack of experimental data. All of the assumptions were proven false by Dr. Alla Zelenyuk and her colleagues.

Released: 11-May-2015 11:05 AM EDT
Out With Heavy Metal
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

PNNL’s new joining process enables the production of all-aluminum auto parts without rivets and fasteners that increase cost and weight.

Released: 6-May-2015 6:15 PM EDT
Three PNNL Scientists Receive DOE Early Career Research Program Awards, Research Funding
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Three scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have been selected to receive Early Career Research Program research grants. The trio were among just 44 recipients nationwide to receive the annual research awards. Under the program, David Heldebrant, Dongsheng Li and Brent VanDevender will each receive five-year research grants that fund work designed to reduce carbon emissions, create new materials for energy storage and measure the mass of some of the smallest components of the universe.

Released: 6-May-2015 6:05 PM EDT
Pacific Northwest National Lab, Oregon Health & Science U Team Up for Biomed Research
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

The Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, Oregon, are joining forces to answer some of the world’s most complex biomedical questions.

Released: 30-Apr-2015 2:05 PM EDT
Energy Expert Discusses Grid Batteries with Congress
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory's Jud Virden will testify on energy storage research before a subcommittee of the U.S House of Representatives.

Released: 29-Apr-2015 7:05 PM EDT
Special Science Call Projects Announced
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

EMSL’s Special Science Call for Proposals ran from mid-April through September and generated 23 accepted studies. The call challenged prospective users to submit high-impact research projects that took advantage of EMSL’s technical resources including RadEMSL, the Quiet Wing microscopy and NanoSIMS capabilities, and HRMAC. The research associated with the call is progressing, and the projects will soon start delivering important scientific findings.

Released: 28-Apr-2015 7:05 PM EDT
Ground Control
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

The United Nations General Assembly declared 2015 the International Year of Soils. Soil is critical for food production and climate regulation. It’s a complex underground ecosystem of organisms that process decaying debris to enrich the land as well as store and release carbon into the atmosphere. However, human activity and changing climate are impacting this environmental system. Scientists working at EMSL are trying to understand the complexities of soil to develop better sustainable land management to protect it.

Released: 28-Apr-2015 4:05 PM EDT
Electron Chirp: Cyclotron Radiation From Single Electrons Measured Directly for First Time
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A group of almost 30 scientists and engineers from six research institutions reported the direct detection of cyclotron radiation from individual electrons April 20 in Physical Review Letters. They used a specially developed spectroscopic method that allowed them to measure the energy of electrons, one single electron at a time. The method provides a new way to potentially measure the mass of the neutrino, a subatomic particle that weighs at most two-billionths of a proton.

Released: 15-Apr-2015 2:05 PM EDT
Packing Heat: New Fluid Makes Untapped Geothermal Energy Cleaner
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

More American homes could be powered by the earth’s natural underground heat with a nontoxic fluid that could cut in half the amount of water needed for a new power generation method called enhanced geothermal systems.

Released: 9-Apr-2015 5:05 PM EDT
Erupting Electrodes: How Recharging Leaves Behind Microscopic Debris Inside Batteries
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Using a powerful microscope to watch multiple cycles of charging and discharging under real battery conditions, researchers have gained insight into the chemistry that clogs rechargeable lithium batteries in work appearing in the March issue of the journal Nano Letters.

Released: 2-Apr-2015 12:05 PM EDT
Analytical Innovations Bring $10 Million Back to National Laboratory, Battelle
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A suite of analytical innovations used to detect and measure very low levels of compounds and elements has topped $10 million in licensing income for Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and its operator Battelle. It’s the first time that income tied to a specific technology developed at PNNL has reached this level, and most of the money has been directly reinvested in the laboratory.

Released: 24-Mar-2015 2:05 PM EDT
PNNL Team Wins American Chemical Society Award
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

For the first time, the American Chemical Society honors a team with its Catalysis Lectureship for the Advancement of Catalytic Science.

6-Mar-2015 7:00 PM EST
The Climate Is Starting to Change Faster
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

The Earth is now entering a period of changing climate that will likely be faster than what’s occurred naturally over the last thousand years, according to a new paper in Nature Climate Change, committing people to live through and adapt to a warming world.

Released: 4-Mar-2015 4:30 PM EST
Big Box Stores Could Ditch the Grid, Use Natural Gas Fuel Cells Instead
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Natural gas powered solid oxide fuel cells, located at the point of use to produce electricity for facilities the size of big box stores, could provide economic and environmental benefits, with additional research, according to new study.

Released: 4-Mar-2015 3:05 PM EST
Permafrost's Turn of the Microbes
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

As the Arctic warms, tons of carbon locked away in Arctic tundra will be transformed into the powerful greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and methane, but scientists know little about how that transition takes place. In a study appearing in today's issue of Nature, scientists looking at microbes in different types of Arctic soil have a new picture of life in permafrost that reveals entirely new species and hints that subzero microbes might be active.

Released: 25-Feb-2015 11:00 AM EST
New Flow Battery to Keep Big Cities Lit, Green & Safe
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

The new zinc-polyiodide redox flow battery uses an electrolyte that has more than two times the energy density of the next-best flow battery used to store renewable energy and support the power grid. It’s high energy density, and resulting lower cost, make it ideal for large cities where space is at a premium.

Released: 24-Feb-2015 1:00 PM EST
Dendrite Eraser: New Electrolyte Rids Batteries of Short-Circuiting Fibers
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A new electrolyte allows rechargeable batteries to operate well without growing dendrites, tiny pin-like fibers that short-circuit rechargeable batteries.

Released: 30-Jan-2015 8:00 AM EST
PNNL Recognized for Moving Biofuel, Chemical Analysis Innovations to Market
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Developing renewable fuel from wet algae and enabling analysis of complex liquids are two of the latest innovations Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has successfully driven to the market with the help of commercial partners.

Released: 29-Jan-2015 11:00 AM EST
Tracking Fish Easier, Quicker, Safer with New Injectable Device
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A new acoustic fish-tracking tag is so tiny it can be injected with a syringe. It’s small size enables researchers to more precisely and safely record how fish swim through dams and use that information to make dams more fish-friendly.

Released: 27-Jan-2015 3:00 PM EST
Man Trumps Dog: Earlier Assumption About BPA Exposure Confirmed
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Coating the mouth with BPA-containing food, like soup, does not lead to higher than expected levels of BPA in blood, a new study in Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology shows. The study authors conclude that oral exposure does not create a risk for high exposures of BPA, also known as bisphenol A.

20-Jan-2015 3:30 PM EST
How Ionic: Scaffolding Is in Charge of Calcium Carbonate Crystals
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Nature packs away carbon in chalk, shells and rocks made by marine organisms that crystallize calcium carbonate. Now, research suggests that the soft, organic scaffolds in which such crystals form guide crystallization by soaking up the calcium like an “ion sponge,” according to new work in Nature Materials. Understanding the process better may help researchers develop advanced materials for energy and environmental uses, such as for removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Released: 6-Jan-2015 1:00 PM EST
Hot Showers, Lower Power Bills with Heat Pump Water Heaters
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Heat pump water heaters are an energy-efficient alternative to conventional electric resistance water heaters. Now research shows heat pump water heaters can also reduce an entire home’s energy use – if they’re connected to the appropriate ducting.

Released: 12-Dec-2014 5:00 PM EST
PNNL Talks Climate, Carbon, Drinking Water and the Nexus of Health & Environment at AGU
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Scientists from the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory will present a variety of research at the 2014 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, which runs Monday, Dec. 15 through Friday, Dec. 19 at the Moscone Convention Center in San Francisco. Noteworthy PNNL research presentations are highlighted.

Released: 2-Dec-2014 2:00 PM EST
Lengthening the Life of High Capacity Silicon Electrodes in Rechargeable Lithium Batteries
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A new study will help researchers create longer-lasting, higher-capacity lithium rechargeable batteries, which are commonly used in consumer electronics. In a study published in the journal ACS Nano, researchers showed how a coating that makes high capacity silicon electrodes more durable could lead to a replacement for lower-capacity graphite electrodes.

Released: 4-Nov-2014 5:00 PM EST
Synthetic Fish Measures Wild Ride Through Dams
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A synthetic fish is helping existing hydroelectric dams and new, smaller hydro facilities become more fish-friendly. The latest version of the Sensor Fish – a small tubular device filled with sensors that analyze the physical stresses fish experience – measures more forces, costs about 80 percent less and can be used in more hydro structures than its predecessor, according to a paper published in the journal Review of Scientific Instruments.

Released: 31-Oct-2014 4:45 PM EDT
Are My Muscular Dystrophy Drugs Working?
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

People with muscular dystrophy could one day assess the effectiveness of their medication with the help of a smartphone-linked device, a new study in mice suggests. The study used a new method to process ultrasound imaging information that could lead to hand-held instruments that provide fast, convenient medical information.

12-Oct-2014 4:00 PM EDT
A Global Natural Gas Boom Alone Won't Slow Climate Change
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A new analysis of global energy use, economics and the climate shows that expanding the current bounty of inexpensive natural gas alone would not slow the growth of global greenhouse gas emissions worldwide, according to a study appearing today in Nature.

Released: 12-Sep-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Ahoy, Offshore Wind: Advanced Buoys Bring Vital Data to Untapped Energy Resource
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Two large buoys that are decked out with advanced scientific instruments will help more accurately predict offshore wind’s power-producing potential.

Released: 10-Sep-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Angling Chromium to Let Oxygen Through
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

More efficient fuel cells might gain wider use in vehicles or as quiet, pollution-free, neighborhood electricity generating stations. A serendipitous finding has resulted in a semiconducting material that could enable fuel cells to operate at temperatures two-thirds lower than current technology, scientists reported August 18 in Nature Communications.

2-Sep-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Birth of a Mineral
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Researchers used a powerful microscope that allows them to see the birth of calcium carbonate crystals in real time, giving them a peek at how different calcium carbonate crystals form, they report in September 5's issue of Science.

Released: 20-Aug-2014 2:00 PM EDT
Water Leads to Chemical That Gunks Up Biofuels Production
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Trying to understand the chemistry that turns plant material into the same energy-rich gasoline and diesel we put in our vehicles, researchers have discovered that water in the conversion process helps form an impurity which, in turn, slows down key chemical reactions.

31-Jul-2014 5:00 PM EDT
“Wetting” a Battery’s Appetite for Renewable Energy Storage
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A new liquid metal alloy enables sodium-beta batteries to operate at lower temperatures, which could help the batteries store more renewable energy and strengthen the power grid.

Released: 21-Jul-2014 12:00 PM EDT
A Noble Gas Cage
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A new material called CC3 effectively traps xenon, krypton, and radon, gases used for lighting or medical industries and, in the case of radon, can be hazardous to people. Research in Nature Materials shows how CC3 does this, which might lead to cheaper, less energy intensive extraction methods.

Released: 14-Jul-2014 10:00 AM EDT
PNNL Scientists Win 3 R&D 100 Awards for Visual Display, Analytics and Energy Technologies
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Technologies that rival electronic screens, enable new molecular analysis and reduce dependence on fossil fuels received recognition for their innovation today. R&D Magazine honored three advancements developed by researchers at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory with its annual R&D 100 awards.



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