WVU technology innovations position West Virginia to lead the hydrogen economy
Engineers at West Virginia University have received a wave of federal support for research projects that will help slash the cost of clean hydrogen.
Engineers at West Virginia University have received a wave of federal support for research projects that will help slash the cost of clean hydrogen.
The Alumni Who Inspire! program recognizes Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources and West Virginia University alumni for their dedication to their professions.
From studying topics as varied as space science to sustainability, four West Virginia University researchers have been named Faculty Early Career Development award winners by the National Science Foundation.
Onur Avci, civil and environmental engineering assistant professor at the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources, has been recognized as this year’s Terry Peshia Early Career Faculty Award recipient from the American Institute of Steel Construction. The Terry Peshia award honors full-time, tenured faculty in civil or architectural engineering who have made significant contributions in steel research and teaching.
Following a telecommunications outage that disrupted cell service nationwide, two West Virginia University experts are renewing calls for cooperative efforts to improve overall U.S. cyber resiliency.
Teams of West Virginia University mining engineering students received first and second placement in the Senior Student Design Award contest for their mine design plans.
The Alumni Who Inspire! program was launched in Fall 2023 to recognize Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources alumni who demonstrate Mountaineer values, and their achievements to inspire future generations of engineers and computer scientists.
For the second year in a row, the West Virginia University Mine Rescue Team from the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources is the champion of the 2024 Intercollegiate Mine Emergency Response Competition.
The West Virginia University Master of Science in Software Engineering (MSSE) online graduate program courses address new technologies, improving software engineering’s ability to architect and design secured advanced complex software systems.
Over 65 teams from around the country gathered this weekend for the second annual West Virginia University Mountaineer VEX Robotics Competition, hosted by the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources and the Department of Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace Engineering at the WVU Rec Center.