Sticky paper offers cheap, easy solution for paper-based diagnostics

Global health researchers, including MolES faculty member Dan Ratner, are working on cheap systems like a home-based pregnancy test that might work for malaria, diabetes or other diseases. A new chemical technique makes medically interesting molecules stick to regular paper "” a possible route to building such paper-based diagnostics from paper you could buy at an office-supply store.

MolES researchers dig for energy solutions through NSF SEP grant

A diverse group of UW collaborators seeking to determine whether solar cells from earth-abundant elements can be a sustainable, environmentally low-impact, and profitable form of electricity production were awarded an Sustainable Energy Pathways grant from the National Science Foundation this fall. Led by Rehnberg Chair Professor Hugh Hillhouse the team, which includes Christine Luscombe (MolES/Materials Science & Engineering), Daniel Gamelin (MolES/Chemistry), Alison Cullen (Evans School of Public Affairs), and Xiaodong Xu (Materials Science & Engineering), will explore the use of nanocrystal and molecular inks to develop low-cost, high-efficiency solar cells with a benign environmental impact.

UW celebrates opening of new Molecular Engineering & Sciences Building

After five years in the planning and construction, the University of Washington this fall opens its new Molecular Engineering & Sciences Building, one of the first facilities in the country dedicated to an emerging area of research.

"We are thrilled to make the UW and Pacific Northwest region a leader in molecular engineering and science," said Matt O'Donnell, dean of the College of Engineering. "This facility is a major step forward that will encourage collaborative, cutting-edge research in biotech and clean tech." Read More

UW science building uses new goo to help stay cool

By Jon Silver
September 6, 2012

The 90,000-square-foot space includes research labs, faculty offices and common areas.
Filling your walls with goo may seem like a strange way to cut energy costs, but that’s exactly what the University of Washington did with its new Molecular Engineering and Sciences Building.

The $77 million, five-story building opened over the summer on a site near Drumheller Fountain. It houses the Molecular Engineering and Sciences Institute, which is a center for research on biotechnology and clean technology. Read More

Seattle Times: UW’s brave (and bright!) new lab for molecular engineering

UW’s brave (and bright!) new lab for molecular engineering

A new, $77 million molecular engineering building at the University of Washington is the centerpiece of a new institute that is working to find new ways to cure diseases and create renewable energy.

By Katherine Long, Seattle Times higher education reporter

As a building, the University of Washington’s new molecular engineering lab is interesting in its own right "” designed with cutting-edge features to make it energy efficient, and bright lab spaces with killer views of Mount Rainier and the Olympics. Read More

A new home for collaboration: the Molecular Engineering Building prepares to open its doors

Featuring four floors of lab and office space specifically tailored for research needs, the new Molecular Engineering and Sciences building ended up expanding considerably on the original plans for reconstruction.

The building, home to the UW Molecular Engineering and Sciences Institute (MolES), will open its doors June 25.

The UW initially issued a bond to obtain a total of $78.5 million to fund the building. Construction began in fall 2009, at which point two and a half floors were planned to be left unfinished and completed at a later phase of construction. Read More

Phase change materials result in cost savings

A building material that absorbs heat during the day and releases it at night promises to save building owners a bundle of cash when it’s time to pay the monthly electricity bill.

They're called phase-change materials, or PCMs, and scientists have been experimenting with them for decades. Although there have been some efforts to introduce them to construction markets in North America and Europe, they remain largely unknown or ignored. Now though, PCMs are getting a place in the spotlight.

A new building for the molecular engineering department of the University of Washington, in Seattle, has PCMs encapsulated in its wall and ceiling panels. Read More

Molecular Engineering and Science Institute to address energy and medicine

What if doctors had tools to pinpoint the location of disease inside the body’s cells? What if window panes captured solar energy that could be used to power homes? Molecular engineering, sometimes called molecular manufacturing or molecular systems, is very small-scale construction made possible by advances in chemical synthesis that allows for this new class of nanotechnology.

Engineering custom molecules is a revolutionary change that promises to advance a wide range of fields, and the University of Washington has established a new Molecular Engineering and Science Institute focused on medical and energy applications. Read More