ORNL Review

75 years of science and technology

Materials for the world

Jeremy Busby didn’t always understand the power of technology transfer, where fundamental discoveries are nurtured to succeed in the marketplace. Busby, who directs ORNL’s Materials Science and Technology Division, is older and wiser now, and he's seen the process work.

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75 years of science and technology

Microscopy and computing for futuristic materials

Integrating electron microscopy and atomic imaging with big data technologies is a monumental task, but the end result is a deeper, more powerful understanding and control over materials functionality at the atomic level. That understanding is what attracted Sergei Kalinin, a researcher at the Center for Nanophase...

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75 years of science and technology

Skilled tradespeople keep ORNL running

It takes more than world-class scientists and engineers to run an institution like ORNL. It also takes world-class welders, pipefitters, glassblowers, riggers and other tradespeople to keep the facilities running and sometimes to build specialized equipment that is unobtainable in any other way.

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75 years of science and technology

UT-ORNL partnerships benefit students

<p>When ORNL climate researcher Melissa Allen was a graduate student at the University of Tennessee in 2011, her advisor, Joshua Fu, told her about the Bredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education, a new partnership between the university and ORNL offering a unique way to earn a Ph.D....

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75 years of science and technology

Neutrons and quantum materials

Neutron scattering scientist Clarina dela Cruz uses the powerful tools at SNS and HFIR to investigate quantum materials, whose exotic physical properties arise from the quantum mechanical properties of their electrons.

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75 years of science and technology

Materials for nuclear environments

ORNL’s nuclear pioneers understood early on that this new technology would demand the hardiest of materials.

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75 years of science and technology

ORNL hosts VIP visitors

In 1959, then-Senator John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline, became surely the most glamorous couple ever to stand on the viewing platform of the Oak Ridge Research Reactor.

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