Unlocking ammonia as a fuel source for heavy industry
Four MIT alumni say their startup, Amogy, has the technology to help decarbonize maritime shipping, power generation, manufacturing, and more.
Four MIT alumni say their startup, Amogy, has the technology to help decarbonize maritime shipping, power generation, manufacturing, and more.
AI supports the clean energy transition as it manages power grid operations, helps plan infrastructure investments, guides development of novel materials, and more.
“I always wanted to be in public service, serve my community, and serve my country,” says the MIT mechanical engineering major.
The virtual VideoCAD tool could boost designers’ productivity and help train engineers learning computer-aided design.
Mantel, founded by MIT alumni, developed a system that captures CO2 from factories and power plants while delivering steam to customers.
The approach could transform large-scale biomanufacturing by enabling automated and contamination-conscious workflows for cell therapies, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine.
Industry leaders agree collaboration is key to advancing critical technologies.
Five-year collaboration between MIT and GE Vernova aims to accelerate the energy transition and scale new innovations.
The team adapted the medical technique to study slag waste that was a byproduct of ancient copper smelting.
The system can be paired with any atmospheric water harvesting material to shake out drinking water in minutes instead of hours.
MIT researchers developed a way to identify the smallest dataset that guarantees optimal solutions to complex problems.
Jack Carson, an MIT second-year undergraduate and EECS major, is the recent winner of the Elie Wiesel Prize in Ethics.
Vivian Chinoda ’25, Alice Hall, Sofia Lara, and Sophia Wang ’24 will begin postgraduate studies at Oxford University next fall.
Lithios, founded by Mo Alkhadra PhD ’22 and Professor Martin Bazant, is scaling up an electrochemical lithium extraction technology to secure supply chains of the critical metal.
MIT.nano cleanroom complex named after Robert Noyce PhD ’53 at the 2025 Nano Summit.