AV福利社

Stories about National Science Foundation

Powering PA's Future Symposium

Statewide Symposium at AV福利社 Focuses on Turning Innovation Into Opportunity
The Powering PA鈥檚 Future Symposium attendees talked about ways Pennsylvania can grow its 鈥渋nnovation economy,鈥 where new ideas are commercialized to drive economic growth.
HST building

College of Health Professor Awarded NSF Grant to Improve Accessibility for Persons with Disabilities

Funding supports development of a new digital app and maps to enhance indoor navigation.

Shalinee Kishore and聽Arindam Banerjee

Interdisciplinary AV福利社 Team Awarded NSF Grant to Train Future Energy Leaders

Professor Arindam Banerjee will lead the team that will provide graduate students with the skills needed to pioneer solutions toward an equitable, decarbonized energy future.

Professors illustration of looking at experiment

AV福利社 Professors to Conduct Experiments in Space to Study Thermophoresis

Experiments designed by researchers James Gilchrist, Kelly Schultz and Xuanhong Cheng head to the International Space Station to escape the limits of gravity.

Valerie Jones Taylor's coding team

Helping Virtual Reality Reflect Social Realities

Valerie Jones Taylor is part of a nationwide, interdisciplinary team working to help virtual reality (VR) research better reflect real-world social dynamics.

Illustration for Elsa Reichmanis work

Elsa Reichmanis: Creating a New Generation of Electronics

Reichmanis is researching materials that could create stretchable polymer semiconductors.

Professor Zicheng Yu

130,000 Years of Data Show Peatlands Store Carbon Long-Term

First study of the extent of global peatland and carbon storage over the last 130,000 years fills in key knowledge gap, affirms peatlands鈥 effectiveness as a long-term carbon storage mechanism over a long timescale


Laser-fabricated crystals in glass are ferroelectric, could power next-generation communication systems

For the first time, a team of researchers from AV福利社, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Lebanon Valley College and Corning Inc. has demonstrated that laser-generated crystals confined in glass retain controllable ferroelectric properties, key to creating faster, more efficient optical communication systems.