A solution for cleaning up PFAS, one of the world’s most intractable pollutants
CSU engineers have developed a treatment train for a PFAS compound best known by its trade name, GenX.
CSU engineers have developed a treatment train for a PFAS compound best known by its trade name, GenX.
Mechanical Engineering Associate Professor Todd Bandhauer is working on technology that could help industry recover wasted energy and save billions of dollars.
A Colorado State University investigator of precipitation physics merges cloud models and observations to understand precipitation rates and storm dynamics (ASR/U.S. Department of Energy).
Now more than ever, climate researchers are turning to trainable, data-nimble computer programs as tools for improving climate models, weather forecasting and more.
All the toxic things in an e-cigarette can end up in the ground or water if they're not properly disposed of, says John Volckens, an environmental health researcher at Colorado State University (NPR).
The powerful 2019 Atlantic hurricane season comes to its official end this weekend, a period that saw 18 named storms, six of which were hurricanes (USA Today).
Building resilient defenses requires an interdisciplinary team, says Civil and Environmental Engineering Professor John van de Lindt in the latest issue of ASEE's PRISM magazine.
Jessie Creamean, a researcher from Colorado State University, has been setting up portable equipment, nicknamed C-3PO, on the ice to sample particles and droplets in the air as part of her studies of how Arctic clouds form (New York Times).
According to CSU hurricane researcher Philip Klotzbach, seven other Atlantic systems have developed into hurricanes after Nov. 20 since the satellite era began in 1966 (Washington Post).
A new study from Colorado State University looking at America's steel bridges shows that nearly 25 percent of steel bridges could see a section collapse in the next 21 years (Popular Mechanics).