Tiny particles power chemical reactions
A new material made from carbon nanotubes can generate electricity by scavenging energy from its environment.
A new material made from carbon nanotubes can generate electricity by scavenging energy from its environment.
Technology solutions to climate change, disaster response, and global health challenges are up for discussion in a new Lincoln Laboratory lecture series.
Yichen Shen PhD '16 is CEO of Lightelligence, an MIT spinout using photonics to reinvent computing for artificial intelligence.
Chemical engineering senior Awele Uwagwu works to accelerate the adoption of solar energy in Nigeria.
Matthew Johnston ’20 uses physics and baseball skills to get remote villages on the grid.
By selectively heating specific phonons without heating the entire material, researchers have enhanced ion diffusion in a way that could have broad applications.
HASTS PhD student Caroline White-Nockleby aims to advance climate justice by minimizing localized burdens of renewable energy implementation.
Whether testing high-field fusion magnets or his own physical endurance, Theo Mouratidis pushes the limits.
Osmoses says its filtration membranes can make gas and vapor separation much less energy-intensive across multiple industries.
Benton Calhoun SM '02 PhD '06 and David Wentzloff SM '02 PhD '07 are co-founders of Everactive, which uses wireless sensing to provide continuous remote monitoring for the industrial internet of things.
The Institute commits to net-zero emissions by 2026, charts course marshaling all of MIT’s capabilities toward decarbonization.
The company’s software, based on work by co-founder and Professor Ed Crawley, expedites the process of home energy accreditation.
In the Northeast, Canadian hydropower could make it so.
How an MIT engineering course became an incubator for fusion design innovations.
By 2030, 40 percent of vehicles sold in China will be electric; MIT research finds that despite benefits, the cost to consumers and to society will be substantial.