Toward cheaper water treatment
MIT spinout makes treating, recycling highly contaminated oilfield water more economical
MIT spinout makes treating, recycling highly contaminated oilfield water more economical
Materials seen as promising for optoelectronics and thermoelectric devices finally yield their secrets.
Nine grants of $200,000 for two years have been awarded to researchers from 11 MIT departments.
Yarns of niobium nanowire can make supercapacitors to provide a surge of energy when it’s needed
New professorship to be named in honor of Professor Emeritus Nam P. Suh
Leader of efforts to design new fuel cycles for nuclear power plants had been on the faculty since 1976.
Startup brings nonstick coating to consumer goods packaging in major licensing deal.
A nuclear power plant that will float eight or more miles out to sea promises to be safer, cheaper, and easier to deploy than today’s land-based plants.
Sports companies connect with engineering students and faculty at the second annual STE@M Day.
PhD student Natasha Wright makes water safe to drink for rural, off-grid Indian villages.
Technique enables production of pure, uniform coatings of metals or polymers, even on contoured surfaces.
Awards were given to outstanding faculty, and graduate, and undergraduate students.
MIT research produces soft material with controllable surface textures that can be varied by squeezing.