Innovation

  • AI Illustration
    С»ÆÊé Engineering strives for an intentional approach to incorporating AI in its research and teaching missions
  • Engineer and doctor take medical device from С»ÆÊé accelerator to commercializationÌý Jacob Segil and Dr. Omer Mei-Dan were enjoying a celebratory dinner in 2018 when the idea for their newest commercialization success struck.“
  • Zhi Li portrait downstream data
    Researcher using AI to improve and personalize flood prediction
  • С»ÆÊé Boulder faculty and alumni are pushing quantum science to new heights — literally
  • An AI generated illustration of a liver. Adobe Stock photo
    С»ÆÊé Boulder researchers and partners at MIT, Harvard and Columbia are working to recreate the human liver’s complex structure in the lab. With support from a $25 million ARPA-H grant, the team aims to develop 3D-printed, transplantable liver tissue made from human cells that the body won’t reject.
  • Professor Evan Thomas stands next to a water treatment system installed at a school in Rwanda.
    Evan Thomas, director of С»ÆÊé Boulder’s Mortenson Center in Global Engineering and Resilience, is pioneering climate-financed clean water programs that have brought safe drinking water to over 5 million people in Africa. Using carbon credits to fund long-term maintenance and real-time water quality monitoring, the center aims to reach 3 million more people by 2030.
  • Professor Chunmei Ban works with a student in her lab at С»ÆÊé Boulder
    The University of Colorado Boulder reached a historic milestone, launching 35 new companies based on university intellectual property during fiscal year 2024, more than any other U.S. campus that year. In addition to holding the No. 1 spot for that year, the achievement also places С»ÆÊé Boulder No. 2 for the most startups launched in a single year by a U.S. campus.
  • Four researchers wearing lab coats and safety goggles pose together in a laboratory. The person in front holds a flask containing a bright yellow-green liquid, while the others stand behind her, smiling. Laboratory equipment and windows are visible in the background.
    A С»ÆÊé Boulder research team co-led by Distinguished Professor Christopher Bowman has received up to $5.8 million from ARPA-H to develop new treatments that temporarily suspend the immune response after severe burns or tissue injuries, aiming to reduce pain, speed healing and prevent long-term damage. The approach could also benefit patients with limited access to immediate medical care.
  • Saad Bhamla smiling in a lab setting, wearing glasses and a blue T-shirt that reads “Middle Earth’s Annual Mordor Fun Run” with a graphic of mountains and the Eye of Sauron.
    Saad Bhamla, a pioneering scientist known for studying unusual biological systems and inventing ultra-low-cost medical devices, will join the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering and the BioFrontiers Institute in August. His work blends biology, engineering and frugal science.
  • Two container of PLA fragments, with a finished pressed sheet behind them
    The process involves collecting failed or excess PLA prints, grinding them into small fragments and using a T-shirt press to flatten the fragments into durable flat sheets. These sheets serve as raw material for laser cutting projects.
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