Opportunities for materials innovation abound
Faculty researchers share insights into new capabilities at the annual Industrial Liaison Program Research and Development Conference.
Faculty researchers share insights into new capabilities at the annual Industrial Liaison Program Research and Development Conference.
Inexpensive 3-D-printed microfluidics device could be used to personalize cancer treatment.
Method can be used to quickly characterize any soft, rapidly changing substance, such as clotting blood or drying cement.
Researchers have designed a novel printhead that works with unprecedented speed and pioneered ways to melt and extrude renewable materials.
High-speed camera shows incoming particles cause damage by briefly melting surfaces as they strike.
In MIT visit, BP chemist details new X-ray and sample chamber technologies, yielding insights into fighting metal corrosion, improving catalytic reactions, and more.
Innovative approach to controlling magnetism could lead to next-generation memory and logic devices.
The School of Engineering’s faculty leadership weigh in on what the MIT Stephen A. Schwarzman College of Computing will mean for their students and faculty.
At the Materials Day Symposium, researchers focus on tools that probe atomic structures in action to yield better designs for metals, solar cells, and polymers.
New design could greatly extend the shelf life of single-use metal-air batteries for electric vehicles, off-grid storage, and other applications.
Material could be used to coat windows, save on air-conditioning costs.
Led by “Queen of Batteries” Christina Lampe-Onnerud, Cadenza Innovation is licensing its lithium ion battery cell architecture to manufacturers around the world.
MIT researchers have demonstrated that a tungsten ditelluride-based transistor combines two different electronic states of matter.
A grad student's research project unexpectedly yields a spooky message made from millions of carbon nanotubes.
Fibers containing systems for mixing, separating, and testing fluids may open up new possibilities for medical screening.