Seaweed-into-biofuel project gets Department of Energy support
The ambitious project involves a high-tech, three-mile-long recycled carbon fiber cable adrift in the open ocean.
The ambitious project involves a high-tech, three-mile-long recycled carbon fiber cable adrift in the open ocean.
Mechanical engineering senior Tom Walker didn’t know what he was getting into when he showed up to an appreciation event for him and his fellow Off-Campus Life student employees on April 10.
Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, the researchers will look at making natural gas engines as efficient as diesel engines in the same class.
Todd Bandhauer is developing a commercially viable turbo-compression cooling system.
The CSU Cycling club finds itself consistently ranked among the top five in the nation for the last 40 years.
Right now, a handful of motivated Fort Collins citizens are collecting cutting-edge scientific data from their backyards that may soon help NASA create maps of global air pollution.
See the Nature’s Amazing Machines exhibit at Denver Museum of Nature & Science through Jan. 1, 2018.
Students in the CSU Energy Club and Student Sustainability Center recently volunteered to help GRID Alternatives and Poudre Valley Rural Electric Association develop a 2-megawatt solar array at Coyote Ridge in south Fort Collins.
The campus and community are invited to an open house, which will include guided tours and live demonstrations of energy research.
The overall goal set by the Department of Energy is to double the yield of biofuel precursors from algae to about 3,700 gallons per acre per year.