News
- Aoife Henry (PhDElEngr‘24) is optimizing technology for wind and solar energy operations. The graduate is leading Zentus, a startup she founded that addresses a critical challenge in the energy sector: how to prevent costly equipment failures that can bring wind and solar farms offline without warning.
Electrical engineering student, Kylie Auerbach (ElEngr'26), stepped into the fast-paced world of semiconductor technology as a systems marketing engineer intern at Texas Instruments.
Gabriel Wardall (ElEng'26) has used his experience and expertise from all aspects of life to gain career success. Wardall interned with Lockheed Martin's Deep Space Exploration division for the past four years as an electrical engineer technician.
A team of engineers has developed a new device that works like a laser but, instead of light, generates incredibly small vibrations called surface acoustic waves.
ECEE at CU Âé¶¹Ó°Ôº is welcoming three new faculty members including Assistant Professor Logan Horowitz and and Assistant Professor Gonzalo Constante Flores. Additionally, award-winning physicist Matt Eichenfield, the inaugural Karl Gustafson Endowed Chair of Quantum Engineering, joined this semester.
CU Âé¶¹Ó°Ôº researchers have developed a laser-based imaging method called stimulated Raman scattering to improve the performance of desalination plants by allowing real-time detection of membrane fouling. The advance could help make desalination more efficient and reliable as global demand for clean water rises.
Researchers have developed a device that can precisely control laser light using a fraction of the power and space required today. Because it can be manufactured just like modern microchips, this tiny device could unlock quantum computers capable of solving problems far beyond the reach of today’s technologies.
Mathur, a fourth-year electrical engineering student, has earned the fall 2025 Community Impact Award from the College of Engineering and Applied Science. Mathur has served as treasurer for the Society of Women Engineers and Engineers Without Border during her time at CU Âé¶¹Ó°Ôº.- Postdoc Tsung-Han Wu and Professor Scott Diddams named Lab Venture Challenge winners for their low SWaP frequency comb for quantum applications. The team formed a startup, Chi3 Optics, to bring their innovation to market.
A major question looms over Colorado’s energy future: why does geothermal energy, a renewable resource,Ìýremain virtually untapped? CU Âé¶¹Ó°Ôº researchers will examine the technological and social barriers that have held back geothermal development in the state.