School of Engineering welcomes new faculty
Fifteen new faculty members join six of the school’s academic departments.
Fifteen new faculty members join six of the school’s academic departments.
Propelled by MIT mentors and colleagues, two Kavanaugh Fellows will spend a year getting their innovative technologies ready for the market.
The unexpected finding could be important for designing spacecraft shielding or in high-speed machining applications.
MIT spinout Boston Metal is commercializing a new method for making steel and other metals, to help clean up the emissions-intensive industry.
At the 2024 MIT Energy Iniative Spring Symposium, experts weighed whether hydrogen stored in the earth might be a practical energy source of the future.
The material could be made as a thin coating to analyze air quality in industrial or home settings over time.
The chip-scale device could provide sensitive detection of lead levels in drinking water, whose toxicity affects 240 million people worldwide.
Ashutosh Kumar, a materials science and engineering PhD student and MathWorks Fellow, applies his eclectic skills to studying the relationship between bacteria and cancer.
The MIT EC^3 Hub, an outgrowth of the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub, will develop multifunctional concrete applications for infrastructure.
MICRO internship program expands, brings undergraduate interns from other schools to campus.
The acclaimed cellist and writer discussed his new memoir and reflected on a remarkable musical career.
The MIT-led projects will investigate novel high-performance designs, materials, processes, and assessment methods for an environmentally sustainable microchip industry.
The grants fund studies of clean hydrogen production, fetal health-sensing fabric, basalt architecture, and shark-based ocean monitoring.
A pioneer in solid-state ionics and materials science education, Wuensch is remembered for his thoughtful scholarship and grace in teaching and mentoring.
Work by MIT engineers could lead to plethora of new applications, including better detectors for nuclear materials at ports.