The tenured engineers of 2022
Fourteen faculty members have been granted tenure in five departments across the MIT School of Engineering.
Fourteen faculty members have been granted tenure in five departments across the MIT School of Engineering.
Digital twins to expand training capabilities through virtual reality.
Welding expert and former head of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering is remembered for his personal teaching style and commitment to students.
Prizes in the materials science competition also went to a waste-monitoring device and a nanofiber-based yarn.
The ceramic-based material could be used for highly efficient actuators for aircraft or other uses, with minimal moving parts.
New material could be used by Tesla to produce all-electric vehicles with just a few massive parts.
New position paper calls for getting stakeholders involved in wind power projects from the start.
Relying on evaporation and radiation — but not electricity — the system could keep food fresh longer or supplement air conditioning in buildings.
By providing researchers with financial and strategic support from the early stages, the Innovation Center hopes to bring new and disruptive technologies to market.
The grant will enable pilot-scale water treatment systems to be built and tested using sustainable hydrogel microparticles.
Students are part of large team that achieved fusion ignition for the first time in a laboratory.
MIT researchers find that changing the pH of a system solves a decades-old problem.
MIT engineers are controlling pore openings for maximum molecule capture.
Made from inexpensive, abundant materials, an aluminum-sulfur battery could provide low-cost backup storage for renewable energy sources.
PhD student Pablo Leon uses machine learning to expedite research on novel battery materials, while helping newer students navigate graduate school.