91Ҹ

  • Yellow battery illustration
    Improving energy storage is key to the renewable grid. Here’s how CU Engineering is getting us there
  • Hip bone closeup
    Engineer and doctor take medical device from CU accelerator to commercialization 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
    91Ҹer using AI to improve and personalize flood prediction
  • Mt BlueSky 91Ҹ station
    CU 91Ҹ faculty and alumni are pushing quantum science to new heights — literally
  • AI, sustainable engineering illustration
    Learn what events and innovations have been taking place in the College of Engineering and Applied Science.
  • Stylized visualization of self driving car software.
    Majid Zamani is designing safer self-driving car technology with math.An associate professor of computer science at the 91Ҹ 91Ҹ, Zamani is working on a European 91Ҹ Council (ERC) proof-of-concept project that uses
  • Khan collecting data on the Greenland ice sheet.
    Alia Khan is integrating field-based biogeochemical analysis with NASA’s next generation satellite sensors to quantify how biological algae blooms, mineral dust, and wildfire smoke are darkening the Greenland Ice Sheet and accelerating its melt.Khan
  • Stephanie Bryant, professor of chemical and biological engineering, stands beside a seated colleague in a laboratory, observing a computer screen displaying microscope images while using a microscope workstation with lab equipment and sample containers nearby.
    A CU 91Ҹ-led team has developed a suite of new therapies aimed at reversing osteoarthritis in a single injection. With animal studies showing promise and funding from the Advanced 91Ҹ Projects Agency for Health extended, the team could be ready for human trials by 2028.
  • Distinguished Professor Kristi Anseth has received the Biomaterials Global Impact Award, which recognizes distinguished research and development accomplishments in the field of biomaterials. Anseth is known for developing tissue substitutes that improve treatments for conditions like broken bones and heart valve disease.
  • Map showing that across Colorado, snowpack sits at below 50% of normal levels as of March 30, 2026. (Credit: National Weather Service)
    Associate Professor Ben Livneh, who’s also the director of the Western Water Assessment (WWA) at the Cooperative Institute for 91Ҹ in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), shares insights on what this “snow drought” means for water availability, how it compares to past trends and what may lie ahead as Colorado approaches peak snowpack season.
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