With high-tech collaborative laboratories and spaces, the complex marks the start of a new era for the university’s top-10 ranked Department of Computer Science.
Topological insulators, a state of matter that was only discovered in the past decade, may enable dramatic advances in quantum computing and spintronics.
The college’s newest Ph.D. program in statistics was unanimously approved recently by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
Physicist-chemist received the award for his computational applications of quantum theories to understand and predict material properties.
Potential uses include economical battery materials to capture solar energy and materials that convert water to hydrogen using sunlight.