This ultrasound sticker senses changing stiffness of deep internal organs
The sticky, wearable sensor could help identify early signs of acute liver failure.
The sticky, wearable sensor could help identify early signs of acute liver failure.
At the ASM Materials Education Foundation’s 2023 Undergraduate Design Competition, seniors Louise Anderfaas and Darsh Grewal design a super-strong aluminum plate for applications such as planes and cars.
The method lets researchers identify and control larger numbers of atomic-scale defects, to build a bigger system of qubits.
Me-Shirts, winner of the annual MIT materials science competition, has developed a biodegradable material than can be easily added and removed from shirts.
High-speed experiments can help identify lightweight, protective “metamaterials” for spacecraft, vehicles, helmets, or other objects.
Their new technique can produce furniture-sized aluminum parts in only minutes.
Study finds chiral structures, with mirror-image configurations, can emerge from nonchiral systems, suggesting new ways to engineer these materials.
Lightweight and inexpensive, miniaturized mass filters are a key step toward portable mass spectrometers that could identify unknown chemicals in remote settings.
MIT professor combines nanoscience and viruses to develop solutions in energy, environment, and medicine.
The one-step fabrication process rapidly produces miniature chemical reactors that could be used to detect diseases or analyze substances.
DMSE’s new multipurpose hub invites undergraduates to explore materials, blending science, technology, and hands-on discovery.
The advance opens a path to next-generation devices with unique optical and electronic properties.
Using machine learning, the computational method can provide details of how materials work as catalysts, semiconductors, or battery components.
The Nano Summit highlights nanoscale research across multiple disciplines at MIT.
The work demonstrates control over key properties leading to better performance.