Wyslouzil Aerosol Lab

Wyslouzil Aerosol Lab

Aerosol and particle technology

About

Doctoral student Kayane Dingilian's award-winning presentation on research pertaining to carbon capture

The Wyslouzil Laboratory studies aerosol science, phase transitions, nucleation, particle growth, nanoparticle structure, and particle formation via electrospray techniques.

The Wyslouzil Group is credited with creating the world's "squarest" ice. This near-perfect cubic arrangement of water molecules is a form of ice that may exist in the coldest high-altitude clouds but is extremely hard to make on Earth. The ability to make and study cubic ice in the laboratory could improve computer models of how clouds interact with sunlight and the atmosphere—two keys to understanding climate change.

At left:  Kayane Dingilian describes her work in the Wyslouzil Lab.  Click on the [  ] symbol in the bottom right of the video to view it full screen.

Related News

Research

Group Members

News
Wyslouzil gives talk at Gordon Research Conference
All gone to Argonne
Department announces student award honorees
NSF-funded research aims to scale up inorganic nanoparticle production
Graduate student Tong Sun wins ACS presentation award
CBE student named in five 2020 grads to watch
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship program recognizes students, alumna
Doctoral student Kayane Dingilian wins AAAR award for video

Publications