CU Innovators News

  • Wil Srubar and student Sarah Williams discuss the block-like materials they are holding in a laboratory.
    Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN)—A structural engineer, Wil Srubar (CU Boulder Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering) recruits biologists, chemists, physicists, materials scientists, and a host of engineers to his lab, where they design biomimetic building materials.
  • A woman in a lab holds up a beaker with a jelly fish inside it
    FY 2023-24 was another tremendous year for innovation and entrepreneurship at the CU. University researchers, inventors and creators began working with Venture Partners at CU Boulder to advance 144 breakthrough innovations, and 36 CU startups were launched through Venture Partners based on campus discoveries.
  • A pair of toddler's hands plant a leafy plant in rich soil
    New CU Boulder research suggests a surprising tool that could help with weight loss: Exposure to beneficial bacteria. With assistance from Venture Partners, a new startup Kioga will pursue new microbe-based ingredients for preventing weight gain and promoting health.
  • Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology, awards Kristina Johnson, right, the National Medal of Technology and Innovation during an awards ceremony.
    Daily Camera—President Joe Biden awarded former CU Boulder professor Kristina Johnson with the National Medal of Technology and Innovation on Friday. Johnson’s research has led to 46 U.S. patents. Her optics inventions have enabled HDTV and modern 3D movies, which have been used in 25,000 theaters around the world and viewed by hundreds of millions of people.
  • Mesa Quantum founders Sristy Agrawal and Wale Lawal. Photo courtesy of Mesa Quantum.
    ColoradoBiz—Agrawal, 29, moved from India to Colorado to study quantum computation at CU in 2019. “Boulder, in general, has the most thriving quantum ecosystem in the world,” she says. The overwhelming focus on quantum computing, however, paved the way for Agrawal to co-found CU Boulder Startup Mesa Quantum with Wale Lawal in early 2024.
  • wind turbines
    Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute—Model Predictive Control (MPC) is an established control technique that is popular in the general control systems community. The MPC approach could have significant impacts on how wind turbines are controlled, not only improving their efficiency, but also reducing structural stress on the turbines and extending their lifetimes.
  • Kristi Anseth
    CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science—Kristi Anseth, a Distinguished Professor and Tisone Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, has been awarded the prestigious VinFuture Special Prize for Women Innovators in recognition of her pioneering research in tissue engineering. Winners were selected from nearly 1,500 scientific nominations spanning more than 80 countries and territories worldwide.
  • A diverse group of peoples stands together with five giant prize checks
    CU Boulder College of Engineering & Applied Science—The College of Engineering and Applied Science continues to establish itself as a leader in innovation, with 22 startups emerging from its research labs in the past fiscal year. This achievement reflects the college's commitment to translating transformative research into solutions that address real-world challenges.
  • A woman with long dark hair and black glasses holds up a beaker to the camera with a jellyfish floating inside of it.
    CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science—Students are constantly designing tools and technologies. Faculty members are launching successful startups on the backs of their own designs. In just the past two years, Venture Partners at CU Boulder has supported ten new startups featuring inventions designed by Mechanical Engineering faculty and students.
  • A hand wearing blue medical gloves holds up a small vial with an illustration of DNA superimposed on the image.
    Founded by CU Boulder Professor Larry Gold in 2000, SomaLogic revolutionized protein measurement by developing a faster, cost-effective process to monitor the vast number of proteins in the human body.
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