Wes Borden, the Robert A. Welch Professor of Chemistry, was named to the inaugural class of Fellows of the American Chemical Society, the world’s largest scientific society.
Art and technology leaders will explore challenges and opportunities in fostering creative art and technology research in a globalizing world and tough economic times.
Rada Mihalcea, associate professor of computer science and engineering, was honored with the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers, the highest honor a beginning scientist or engineer can receive in the United States.
A recent study co-authored by a UNT faculty member reveals that reductions in budgets for environmental enforcement agencies has a direct correlation on non-compliance by private industry.
The new high-powered computing facility will provide a 10-fold increase in the university's computational power and will be among the premier facilities of its kind in the country.
Jeff Helstad, an engineering student at the University of North Texas, hopes to dedicate his engineering career to developing alternative materials that could prevent Explosively Formed Projectiles from penetrating soldiers' armor.
Jincheng Du, assistant professor of materials science and engineering will conduct a three-year project to further understand bioactive glasses, which can also act as coatings for knee and hip replacements and assist in drug delivery.
UNT students and community members will have the chance to hear from six great animal trainers during the The Great Minds Conference, sponsored by UNT's Organization for Reinforcement Contingencies with Animals.
Student will collect soil samples, isolate bacterial viruses called phage and analyze the DNA sequence of the phage's genome as part of an innovative program designed to involve college freshmen in scientific discovery.
Professors from chemistry and materials science and engineering are pioneering innovative research in the field of organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs, an emerging technology that scientists say will revolutionize lighting.
The Texas Center for Digital Knowledge is partnering with the institute, known as BRIT, to develop technology that will transform data from the printed or handwritten labels into a form that is processable by computers