Two-dimensional material shows promise for optoelectronics
Team creates LEDs, photovoltaic cells, and light detectors using novel one-molecule-thick material.
Team creates LEDs, photovoltaic cells, and light detectors using novel one-molecule-thick material.
New MIT vaccines that catch a ride to immune cell depots could help fight cancer and HIV.
MIT researchers evaluate graphene’s potential for making desalination economically viable.
Bench-top 'Robofurnace' automates chemical vapor deposition process.
Postdoc Mostafa Bedewy shows complex competition between chemical activation and mechanical forces in growing CNT forests.
Mechanical engineering professor explores the science and technology of nano manufacturing.
Project provides a systematic way of exploring the vast realm of unfamiliar materials.
Flexible materials could provide ways to manipulate sound and light.
Marshall Scholar Colleen Loynachan tackles materials science problems with a photographer’s perspective.
Study reveals immune cells that are critical to combating the parasite in early stages of infection.
MIT researchers find that contrary to conventional wisdom, cathodes made of disordered lithium compounds can perform better than perfectly ordered ones.
New approach to use of 2-D carbon material opens up unexpected properties, could unleash new uses.
The MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub seeks to advance the scientific basis for evaluating the environmental impact of concrete.
MIT team develops simple, inexpensive method that could help realize material’s promise for electronics, solar power, and sensors.