The Future of Smart Materials
What if your clothes could tell your phone you’re in distress? Or your shoes could recharge your phone? ACCESS enables The Internet of Everything.
What if your clothes could tell your phone you’re in distress? Or your shoes could recharge your phone? ACCESS enables The Internet of Everything.
A team at Ohio University used PSC’s Bridges-2 system to carry out a series of simulations showing how coal might eventually be converted to valuable — and carbon-neutral — materials like graphite and carbon nanotubes.
Early ACCESS allocation helps researchers forecast Hurricane Ian’s flooding impacts
Frontera, Stampede2 simulations help reveal new exciton
ACCESS resources, Bridges and Bridges-2, help solve the mystery behind the formation of Mercury.
Scientists reveal structure of the key part of the inner ear responsible for hearing.
A great deal of research goes into creating materials used in everyday structures such as buildings and bridges. Using supercomputers to study next-generation compounds is just one way ACCESS is an important resource for materials science researchers.
Purdue’s supercomputer, Anvil, has recently completed its testing phase and is now officially an ACCESS resource. It’s already hard at work aiding researchers in their search for sustainability and in cancer-research training.
A group of Louisiana researchers, using molecular dynamics and the Comet supercomputer at SDSC, examined how a given mix of odor neutralizers works to counteract unpleasant smells.
An international group of researchers used SDSC’s Expanse supercomputer to create simulations of the currents in the California Current Ecosystem – an area spanning more than 1,800 miles along the coast from Canada to Mexico.