Technology pioneered at ANSTO
Technology at heart of award-winning wastewater innovation from BioGill.
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Technology at heart of award-winning wastewater innovation from BioGill.
Sarah is a dedicated science communicator with a strong background in education.
ANSTO researchers are undertaking the fabrication and characterising advanced fuels and investigating the key properties of nuclear waste and its long-term interaction with containment materials to improve safety for short and long-term storage.
The Australian Critical Minerals Research and Development Hub (the Hub) unites the expertise of top Federal science agencies: ANSTO, Geoscience Australia, and CSIRO with the aim of addressing technical challenges and drive collaborative research across the critical minerals value chain.
ANSTO researchers investigate the behavior of materials in extreme environments, to analyse and predict how they will behave under adverse conditions.
ANSTO’s Dr Joanne Lackenby and Dr Katie Sizeland have been selected 2018 Superstars of STEM as some of Australia’s most inspiring scientists, technologists and educators.
An international research collaboration between the University of New South Wales (UNSW), the Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics (SINAP) and ANSTO has provided insights into the performance of advanced material for use in the high-temperature environment of molten salt systems.
Funding awarded for research on an additive manufacturing technique for use on rail infrastructure.
A large collaboration of European investigators gained insights into how the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (S protein) impacts with lipid metabolism in the body with implications for COVID-19 infection and mRNA vaccination.
Sarah joined ANSTO in May as a part-time Marketing and Events Coordinator for the Nuclear Science and Technology group.
Role at ANSTO
Study shows for the first time that vegetation in the Windmill Islands, East Antarctica is changing rapidly in response to a drying climate.
An Australian-led international research team, including a core group of ANSTO scientists, has found that doping a promising material provides a simple, effective method capable of extracting uranium from seawater.
Phenomenon predicted by Nobel Prize recipient
ANSTO undertakes a rigorous environmental monitoring program and shares expertise nationally and internationally.