NEWS RELEASES
DOE Funded News
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 1-Jul-2025 09:10 ET (1-Jul-2025 13:10 GMT/UTC)
New USC study demonstrates unconditional exponential quantum scaling advantage
University of Southern CaliforniaPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Physical Review X
- Funder
- Army Research Laboratory, U.S. National Science Foundation, Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, DOE/US Department of Energy, DOE/US Department of Energy, DOE/US Department of Energy
Yes, in my back yard: people who live near large-scale solar projects are happy to have more built nearby
FrontiersPeer-Reviewed Publication
Building renewable energy plants to meet our energy needs is critical to transitioning away from fossil fuels and tackling global warming — but how do people who live near these plants feel about them? Reports of community opposition have been used against renewable energy. Scientists surveyed communities across the US living within three miles — about an hour’s walk — of solar energy and found that 82% of local residents would support or are neutral towards more solar energy plants in their local area.
- Journal
- Frontiers in Sustainable Energy Policy
- Funder
- DOE/US Department of Energy
MXene-enhanced polymer composites are featured for their potential in sustainable energy harvesting and wearable electronics
Boise State University College of EngineeringPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Nano Energy
- Funder
- NASA EPSCOR, DOE/US Department of Energy, DOE/US Department of Energy, DOE/US Department of Energy
Printed energy storage charges into the future with MXene inks
Boise State University College of EngineeringPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Small Methods
- Funder
- DOE/US Department of Energy, DOE/US Department of Energy
Heat domes and flooding have nearly tripled since the ’50s
University of PennsylvaniaPeer-Reviewed Publication
A new study led by Michael Mann of the University of Pennsylvania finds that atmospheric patterns known to lock in extreme weather, like heat domes and flooding, have nearly tripled since the 1950s. The research highlights a growing gap between real-world risks and what climate models currently capture.
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Funder
- University of Pennsylvania, DOE/US Department of Energy
New material behavior to improve speed and efficiency of technology
University of MinnesotaPeer-Reviewed Publication
In a new study, researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities discovered surprising magnetic behavior in one of the thinnest metallic oxide materials ever made. This could pave the way for the next generation of faster and smarter spintronic and quantum computing devices.
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Funder
- DOE/US Department of Energy
Next generation of batteries may get lifespan boost with help from new UCLA imaging techniques
California NanoSystems InstitutePeer-Reviewed Publication
Lithium-metal batteries could hold double the energy compared to today’s lithium-ion batteries, but they currently have a much shorter lifespan.
A UCLA team developed a technique that, for the first time, allows for high-resolution imaging of lithium-metal batteries while they charge.
Measuring a corrosion layer that forms on lithium offered clues for better battery design, and the imaging technique may have uses in other fields, such as biology.
- Journal
- Science Advances
- Funder
- DOE/US Department of Energy