Materials science
A better way to shed water
October 22, 2012
MIT researchers find that lubricated, nanotextured surfaces improved performance of condensers in power and desalination plants.
Profile: Ju Li explores new nanomaterials
October 10, 2012
Working from the scale of atoms on up, he designs materials for future energy applications.
New technique reveals lithium in action
October 8, 2012
Fundamental reactions behind advanced battery technology, revealed in detail by advanced imaging method, could lead to improved materials.
Probing the mysteries of cracks and stresses
September 28, 2012
Analysis of molecular-level fracture and stress mechanisms could have broad implications for understanding materials’ behavior.
Understanding and predicting materials behavior
September 26, 2012
Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering takes an interdisciplinary approach
Oscillating microscopic beads could be key to biolab on a chip
September 25, 2012
MIT team finds way to manipulate and measure magnetic particles without contact, potentially enabling multiple medical tests on a tiny device.
World-class musician Mark Stewart comes to the Glass Lab
September 14, 2012
In a yearlong residency, the musician and instrument designer will build a glass orchestra with MIT students.
Protein impedes microcirculation of malaria-infected red blood cells
August 30, 2012
MIT-led research team finds that protein significantly reduces infected cells’ ability to squeeze through tiny channels compared to healthy cells.
Engineers achieve longstanding goal of stable nanocrystalline metals
August 23, 2012
Method developed by MIT researchers could produce materials with exceptional strength and other properties.
One-molecule-thick material has big advantages
August 23, 2012
MIT researchers produce complex electronic circuits from molybdenum disulfide, a material that could have many more applications.
Plants exhibit a wide range of mechanical properties, engineers find
August 14, 2012
Biological structures may help engineers design new materials.
Also labeled: Bioinspiration, Biology, Cells, Nanoscience and nanotechnology, Plant mechanics, Plants
Graphene’s behavior depends on where it sits
August 13, 2012
New findings show that the material beneath the thin carbon sheets determines how they react chemically and electrically.
Wrinkled surfaces could have widespread applications
August 1, 2012
MIT team discovers way of making perfectly ordered and repeatable surfaces with patterns of microscale wrinkles.
Yildiz wins 2012 Charles W. Tobias Young Investigator Award
July 27, 2012
Also labeled: Awards, honors and fellowships, Computation, Energy, Faculty, Nuclear science and engineering, Research
Research update: Chips with self-assembling rectangles
July 19, 2012
New technique allows production of complex microchip structures in one self-assembling step.
Also labeled: Computer science and technology, Electrical engineering and electronics, Faculty, Graduate, postdoctoral, Innovation and Entrepreneurship (I&E), Microchips, Microsystems Technology Laboratories, Research, Research Laboratory of Electronics, Self-assembly, Semiconductors, Students, National Science Foundation (NSF), Singapore-MIT
Dripping faucets inspire new way of creating structured particles
July 18, 2012
Researchers find new method for making spherical particles, from nanoscale to pinhead-sized — including complex beach-ball-like shapes.
A new approach to water desalination
July 2, 2012
Graphene sheets with precisely controlled pores have potential to purify water more efficiently than existing methods.
New technique allows simulation of noncrystalline materials
June 22, 2012
Multidisciplinary team develops mathematical approach that could help in simulating materials for solar cells and LEDs.
All-carbon solar cell harnesses infrared light
June 21, 2012
New type of photovoltaic device harnesses heat radiation that most solar cells ignore.
Teaching self-assembling structures a new trick
June 7, 2012
MIT researchers produce 3-D configurations that could lead to new microchips and other devices.
Crowding causes cells to produce an orderly matrix of molecules
May 24, 2012
Making proteins stand in line could lead to more lifelike lab tests.
Nuclear science and engineering graduate students win NEUP fellowships
May 18, 2012
Black, Boyd and Shaner among 31 recipients
Gradečak wins Nano Letters young investigator award
May 7, 2012
Materials science and engineering professor studies nanophotonics and electronics.























