Argonne scientists have developed a new electrolyte for lithium metal batteries to power electric vehicles. They would greatly increase vehicle range, cost less than current designs and run more safely, since the electrolyte is nonflammable.
It’s summer blockbuster season. Before you buy tickets for the next comic book movie, be sure to binge all of the ways that Argonne celebrated quantum science with the spring release of Marvel’s Antman and the Wasp: Quantumania.
Over 1,000 scientists, engineers and staff from U.S. Department of Energy national labs, academia, and technology companies discussed the rapidly emerging opportunities and challenges of artificial intelligence for science, energy and security.
Friends, colleagues and collaborators of Ewing “Rusty” Lusk came together to celebrate his life and career and explore the future of computing at a symposium held April 13 and 14, 2023, at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory.
Argonne National Laboratory has developed computer models to predict how disease can spread. With funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, it will work with Sandia National Laboratories algorithms to make them better.
Autonomous discovery will change science and scientific careers. Argonne hopes to train the next generation of STEM experts in robotics, artificial intelligence and machine learning during a 2023 summer internship program to support autonomous discovery.
Argonne’s Aurora supercomputer and upgraded Advanced Photon Source will be powerful tools for discovery. Together, they’ll form a scientific supermerger: The combined data collection and computing power will advance discovery time and unlock new science.
Argonne uses multidisciplinary expertise and preeminent high performance computing facilities to explore the potential of nuclear energy. Here are five fission-centric forays into the potential of nuclear energy.