Faculty, staff, students to evaluate ways to decarbonize MIT's campus
New Decarbonization Working Group will leverage member expertise to explore and assess existing and in-development solutions to decarbonize the MIT campus by 2050.
New Decarbonization Working Group will leverage member expertise to explore and assess existing and in-development solutions to decarbonize the MIT campus by 2050.
At the MIT Energy Initiative Fall Colloquium, Shell’s chief technology officer laid out two very different potential paths for the decades ahead.
MIT chemists developed a battery cathode based on organic materials, which could reduce the EV industry’s reliance on scarce metals.
After three deployments in Afghanistan, Lt. Col. Jill Rahon is pursuing research that will help verify conformation to nuclear treaties.
New insights into how proton-coupled electron transfers occur at an electrode could help researchers design more efficient fuel cells and electrolyzers.
MIT Electric Vehicle Team builds a unique hydrogen fuel cell–powered electric motorcycle.
International energy company becomes sustaining member of industry group.
The Energy and Climate Hack presented opportunities for students and companies to collaborate and develop innovative solutions.
MIT professor combines nanoscience and viruses to develop solutions in energy, environment, and medicine.
Keen to accelerate the adoption of nuclear energy, Isabel Naranjo De Candido works to make small, modular reactors efficient throughout their lifecycle.
2023 Global Change Outlook from the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change quantifies benefits of policies that cap global warming at 1.5 C.
Fusion’s success as a renewable energy depends on the creation of an industry to support it, and academia is vital to that industry’s development.
The Nano Summit highlights nanoscale research across multiple disciplines at MIT.
The work demonstrates control over key properties leading to better performance.
Fall 2023 Wulff Lecture speaker Sossina Haile ’86, PhD ’92 uses ammonia and a “superprotonic” material for efficient and eco-friendly energy generation.