Sustainable e-recycling process economically competitive with current practices

INL researchers have made a case that a process that offers an economically competitive alternative to traditional smelting processes.
INL, Oregon State University Collaborate to Inspire Future Nuclear Engineers

American Nuclear Society conferences are attended to learn about the latest innovations, present new research, and spark hypotheses in the nuclear sector.
Native Americans used lava tubes as refrigerators during lean times

40 years ago, Tom Miller discovered a cave near the eastern Idaho Big Southern Butte hiding a mystery unlike any previously found on the Snake River Plain.
Idaho researchers slash cost of providing biomass for biofuels production

INL researchers helped meet biomass cost challenges by reducing the modeled cost of growing, harvesting, storing, transporting and preprocessing biomass.
DOE officially approved the contract modification that enables a five-year extension

DOE officially approved a contract that enables a five-year extension of the Battelle Energy Alliance (BEA) operation of INL through Sept. 30, 2024.
The electrochemical process could eliminate the need for high-energy steam cracking

A team of Idaho National Laboratory researchers has now pioneered an electrochemical process that could eliminate the need for high-energy steam cracking.
Idaho State Board of Education, INL break ground on two research facilities

To help secure our nation’s energy future, INL, together with the Idaho State Board of Education, is breaking ground on two new cybersecurity facilities.
Low-temp hydrocarbon cracking could make plastics from natural gas

A team of Idaho National Laboratory researchers has now pioneered an electrochemical process that could eliminate the need for high-energy steam cracking.
Peculiar fluids offer clean alternative to traditional rare earth separation

DOE recently awarded funding to INL researchers who are developing a more efficient process of creating rare earth element-based technology.
World’s fastest supercomputers to help model how liquids move through shale

An INL researcher is trying to discover what happens when pressurized CO2 interacts with oil or gas in shale using the nation’s fastest supercomputers.