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Frozen electrical wiring

February freeze analyzed one year later

February 15, 2022

Last February’s severe winter storm caused sustained peaks in demand for electricity across Texas, triggering tremendous stress on the state’s power grid and widespread outages lasting days. Now a new report from Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy examines why the winter storm caused this deadly electricity supply crisis and how it could have been avoided.

Fermented kale juice

Bacterial ‘bully’ could improve food production

February 14, 2022

Lactic acid bacteria that thrive in many organisms, including humans, employ a hybrid metabolism that combines respiration and fermentation to give it an advantage over competitors. Researchers say the discovery could lead to enhanced techniques for food and chemical production.

Campus panorama from Fondren Library

Rice announces plans to be carbon neutral by 2030

February 11, 2022

Rice President David Leebron and Provost Reginald DesRoches outlined the efforts in a message to the university community Feb. 11.

Promotional banner for "Opening the Archives of the Impossible" conference at Rice, March 3-6, 2022

Rice to host international conference on scholarship of the paranormal March 3-6

February 10, 2022

“Opening the Archives of the Impossible” will also showcase collections housed in university library

Rice quantum physicists Pengcheng Dai and Qimiao Si

Physicists find evidence of new quantum phase

February 10, 2022

Rice physicists collaborated on the discovery of a quantum phase that appears to break time-reversal symmetry.

Heart simulation

Clearly, this heart beats strong

February 9, 2022

In time for Valentine’s Day, engineers at Rice University and Waseda University provide a realistic view of what happens inside a beating heart.

Microscopic glass spheres found in coal fly ash contain rare earth elements that could be recycled rather than buried in landfills, according to Rice University scientists. Their flash Joule heating process has been adapted to recover the elements.

Rare earth elements await in waste

February 9, 2022

Rice University scientists applied their flash Joule heating process to coal fly ash and other toxic waste to safely extract rare earth elements essential to modern electronics and green technologies.

Jillian Conrad, "Hydras," detail, 2022, courtesy of the artist

‘Hydras’ artwork inspired by Robinson Lab imagery

February 7, 2022

Conrad’s newest piece installed at BRC; opening reception Saturday

Surgical mask harness

Rice team’s mask strategy passes muster

February 7, 2022

During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, a team at Rice University went looking for and found a way to make standard surgical masks better at keeping out small airborne droplets that might contain the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

Screenshot from imagineRio

imagineRio allows users to visualize five centuries of change in a modern megacity

February 7, 2022

Major rebuild to the Rice site adds 3,000 photos, new tools for teaching, learning

Oil rig

Energy transition could be headed for ‘valley of death,’ says report

February 7, 2022

Investments in oil and gas have decreased in favor of alternative energy in recent years, but with alternative energy technologies still able to supply only a small fraction of useable energy, rushing the transition would be a costly mistake, according to a new report from Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.

Matthew Jones

Matthew Jones wins NSF CAREER Award

February 3, 2022

Rice chemist Matthew Jones wins an NSF CAREER Award to study controlled growth of metallic nanoparticles for biomedicine, energy storage and computing.

Nathan Dautenhahn

Nathan Dautenhahn wins CAREER Award

January 31, 2022

Rice University computer scientist Nathan Dautenhahn wins a National Science Foundation CAREER Award to pursue simplified, automated security for sophisticated software.

Flash graphene process

Machine learning fine-tunes flash graphene

January 31, 2022

Rice University scientists are using machine learning techniques to streamline the process of synthesizing graphene from waste through flash Joule heating.

Uber or Lyft

Access to gig economy may spur small business creation, study finds

January 31, 2022

Access to the gig economy may help facilitate the creation of new businesses, according to a new study. The gig (or short-term job) market is often more transitory than the traditional freelancing market. The flexibility and low barrier to entry of these jobs gives would-be entrepreneurs fallback opportunities that reduce their financial risk, argues Yael Hochberg, professor in entrepreneurship and finance at Rice University's Jones Graduate School of Business.

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