environmental.cee.illinois.edu
Campus | The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
http://environmental.cee.illinois.edu/campus
The University of Illinois hosts a suite world-class research facilities open to faculty and students. Below is an incomplete description of these facilities. The Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory. Center for Microanalysis of Materials (CMM). Laser and Spectroscopy Facility. The Imaging Technology Group. And the Visualization Laboratory. The Microscopy Suite instruments include dissecting, stereology, fluorescence, confocal, transmission electron, environmental scanning electron, atomic force...
my.mrl.illinois.edu
MRL Storeroom - My.MRL Portal - U of I
https://my.mrl.illinois.edu/storeroom
Agricultural and Biological Engineering. Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. Civil and Environmental Engineering. Electrical and Computer Engineering. Industrial and Enterprise Systems Engineering. Materials Science and Engineering. Mechanical Science and Engineering. Nuclear, Plasma and Radiological Engineering. Computational Science and Engineering. Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory. National Center for Supercomputing Applications. Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences.
nano.illinois.edu
Associated Laboratories | Nano @ Illinois
http://nano.illinois.edu/collaboration/labs.html
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. Theme: Molecular and Electronic Nanostructures. The Beckman Institute is a multidisciplinary research institute devoted to basic research in the physical science, computation, engineering, biology, behavior, and cognition. Researchers in the Molecular and Electronic Nanostructures and others have access to a wide array of powerful research tools. Roy J Carver Biotechnology Center. Coordinated Science Laboratory (CSL). Micro and Nanotechnology Laborat...
my.mrl.illinois.edu
Sign in to My.MRL - My.MRL Portal - U of I
https://my.mrl.illinois.edu/cybercash/createcharge.asp
Agricultural and Biological Engineering. Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. Civil and Environmental Engineering. Electrical and Computer Engineering. Industrial and Enterprise Systems Engineering. Materials Science and Engineering. Mechanical Science and Engineering. Nuclear, Plasma and Radiological Engineering. Computational Science and Engineering. Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory. National Center for Supercomputing Applications. Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences.
ccc.illinois.edu
Laboratory - Continuous Casting Consortium - U of I
http://ccc.illinois.edu/laboratory.html
Metals Processing Simulation Laboratory. Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 345 Mechanical Engineering Bldg. 1206 West Green Street, Urbana, IL 61801. Phone: 217-244-4656, 217-244-2859. This facility, combined with the expertise of our research group. Allows the simulation of fluid flow, heat transfer, and stress generation of a range of metallurgical processes, and especially, the continuous casting of steel slabs. 1-D finite-difference analysis...
my.mrl.illinois.edu
Sign in to My.MRL - My.MRL Portal - U of I
https://my.mrl.illinois.edu/review
Agricultural and Biological Engineering. Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. Civil and Environmental Engineering. Electrical and Computer Engineering. Industrial and Enterprise Systems Engineering. Materials Science and Engineering. Mechanical Science and Engineering. Nuclear, Plasma and Radiological Engineering. Computational Science and Engineering. Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory. National Center for Supercomputing Applications. Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences.
news.illinois.edu
News Bureau | ILLINOIS
https://news.illinois.edu/news/15/0521self_destruct_ScottWhite_JohnRogers.html
News Bureau - Research. Mission possible: This device will self-destruct when heated. May 21, 2015 2:00 pm. Physical Sciences Editor 217-244-1073. A device is remotely triggered to self-destruct. A radio-frequency signal turns on a heating element at the center of the device. The circuits dissolve completely. Photo courtesy Scott White. CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Where do electronics go when they die? The researchers, led by aerospace engineering. Professor Scott R. White. The self-destructing devices came from a...
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