Fast-tracking the search for energy-efficient materials
Doctoral candidate Nina Andrejević combines spectroscopy and machine learning techniques to identify novel and valuable properties in matter.
Doctoral candidate Nina Andrejević combines spectroscopy and machine learning techniques to identify novel and valuable properties in matter.
An MIT team develops 3D-printed tags to classify and store data on physical objects.
Using ultrathin materials to reduce the size of superconducting qubits may pave the way for personal-sized quantum devices.
New work on superconducting kagome metal will aid design of other unusual quantum materials, with many potential applications.
MIT researchers lay out a strategy for how universities can help the US regain its place as a semiconductor superpower.
SMART breakthrough could help develop technologies that can identify materials according to desired properties for specific applications.
The targeted approach eliminated tumors in mice, with minimal side effects.
The rechargeable battery can be woven and washed, and could provide power for fiber-based electronic devices and sensors.
A new way of processing rare-earth and other key metals to separate them from other materials could reduce environmental impact and cost.
A new computational simulator can help predict whether changes to materials or design will improve performance in new photovoltaic cells.
Over 50 years at MIT, Dresselhaus made lasting contributions to materials science within the research group of longtime collaborator and wife, Mildred Dresselhaus.
Ultrastable and made of inexpensive, nontoxic elements, chalcogenide perovskites could find applications in solar cells, lighting, and more.
SMART researchers demonstrate a practical way to make indium gallium nitride LEDs with considerably higher indium concentration.
A new machine-learning system costs less, generates less waste, and can be more innovative than manual discovery methods.
New research on ancient Roman concrete inspires durable and sustainable modern constructions.