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A team of Princeton researchers found they could coat a liquid elastic on the
outside of a disc and spin it to form useful, complex patterns. When
spun just right, tiny spindles rise from the…
Date
February 22nd, 2021 Department
Chemical and Biological Engineering
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This session was part of Engage 2020, the new Princeton University innovation and entrepreneurship conference. During Engage 2020, Professor Robert Prud’homme delivered a lecture on his…
Date
November 5th, 2020 Speaker
Pablo Debenedetti, Dean for Research; Robert K. Prud'homme, Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering Department
Princeton Innovation Location
Online
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Professor Cliff Brangwynne presented his group's research on a novel approach to targeting COVID-19 in a session highlighting Princeton's pandemic research and solutions. Brangwynne's…
Date
November 6th, 2020 Speaker
Clifford Brangwynne, Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering, HHMI Department
Princeton Innovation Location
Online
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May 6th, 2020 webinar "ENVIRONMENT". Hosted by Pascale Poussart, Director of the Office of Undergraduate Research, with welcome by Jill Dolan, Dean of the College.
Presenters:
Kasia…
Date
May 6th, 2020 Speaker
Princeton Research Day presenters Location
Webinar
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Zeolites are crystalline, solid Brønsted acid catalysts with tunable micropore (< 2 nm diameters) networks that act as molecular sieves by selectively accommodating molecules based on size.…
Date
April 29th, 2020 Speaker
Hayat Adawi, GS Department
Chemical and Biological Engineering
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Dean for Research Pablo
Debenedetti highlights technology-related corporate engagement across
Princeton's campus and traces the University's legacy in computer and data
science back to the…
Date
April 17th, 2018 Speaker
Dean for Research Pablo G. Debenedetti Department
Office of the Dean for Research Location
Cisco Headquarters, Santa Clara, California
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Mark Brynildsen, assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering at Princeton University, and his team are harnessing the body's own immune system to build better antibiotics.
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