Rice University

Breakthrough Method To Generate Hydrogen Gas In One-Step Process

HOUSTON, Texas - Hydrogen sulfide, infamous for its aroma of rotten eggs, is known to be highly poisonous and corrosive - especially in wastewater applications. Petrochemical plants and other industries make thousands of tons of this gas every year as a byproduct of various processes that separate sulfur from petroleum, natural gas, coal, and other

By |2022-11-05T13:15:16-04:00November 5th, 2022|ESD|

Researches Develop Fleet Of Autonomous Drones To Detect Gas Leaks

HOUSTON – Rice University researchers, in a collaboration with Baylor College of Medicine and Houston nonprofit Technology For All are developing a fleet of autonomous aerial drones that coordinate with each other to detect, track and model the environment and let neighborhoods know of airborne perils that can be especially hazardous following extreme weather events. Rice

By |2018-08-30T17:07:59-04:00August 30th, 2018|Drones|

Engineers Discover Catalyst That Cleans Toxic Agricultural Nitrates From Drinking Water

HOUSTON - Engineers at Rice University's Nanotechnology Enabled Water Treatment Center have found a catalyst that cleans toxic nitrates from drinking water by converting them into air and water. "Nitrates come mainly from agricultural runoff, which affects farming communities all over the world," said Rice chemical engineer Michael Wong, the lead scientist on the study.

By |2018-01-12T09:22:25-05:00January 12th, 2018|STEM|

Microscopic Defects Make Batteries Better

HOUSTON - High-performance electrodes for lithium-ion batteries can be improved by paying closer attention to their defects -- and capitalizing on them, according to Rice University scientists. Rice materials scientist Ming Tang and chemists Song Jin at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Linsen Li at Wisconsin and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology led a study

By |2017-12-07T13:54:36-05:00December 7th, 2017|Clean Update|

Program Guides Robots Towards Human-Like Ways To Collaborate

HOUSTON  – Like toddlers, robots can use a little help as they learn to function in the physical world. That's the purpose of a Rice University program that gently guides robots toward the most helpful, human-like ways to collaborate on tasks. Rice engineer Marcia O'Malley and graduate student Dylan Losey have refined their method to

By |2017-12-04T20:12:46-05:00December 4th, 2017|IoT|