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New from WVU ORIC: Electronic submission of IRB documents. Learn More WVU researchers Nick Wu left, and Ismail Celik work on flow phenomena in fuels 

cells as well as internal combustion engines and utility boilers in WVU's Computational fluid Dynamics and Applied Multi-Physics Center. Wu, a part of 

WVNano, has a particular focus on nanomaterials and fuel cells. Olafemi Olajide (seated) works the control panel of WVU's proprietary 

coal-to-liquids process reactor as chemical engineering Professor Alfred Stiller, the technology's principle investigator and co-inventor, looks on. The 

technology has been licensed to an energy company. Doctoral student Stephanie Sears, a member of WVU's plasma physics group, is 

among the outstanding students and faculty who have helped transform the  Physics Department into a nationally-respected hub of research. New products, new industries and more jobs require continuous additions to 

knowledge of the laws of nature and the application of that knowledge to practical purposes WVU Research Office endeavors to generate and disseminate new knowledge and foster 

scholarly and creative works develop innovative technologies; promote entrepreneurlism; and advance economic development

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SPOTLIGHT

Research by Dr. Amy Hessl, WVU associate professor of geography supports a theory that the spark behind the great Mongol empire expansion just may have been rain, not drought as is often suggested.