A nonflammable battery to power a safer, decarbonized future
The startup Alsym Energy, co-founded by Professor Kripa Varanasi, is hoping its batteries can link renewables with the industrial sector and beyond.
The startup Alsym Energy, co-founded by Professor Kripa Varanasi, is hoping its batteries can link renewables with the industrial sector and beyond.
Study finds many climate-stabilization plans are based on questionable assumptions about the future cost and deployment of “direct air capture” and therefore may not bring about promised reductions.
The MIT spinout Emvolon is placing its repurposed engines next to methane sources, to generate greener methanol and other chemicals.
A new electrode design boosts the efficiency of electrochemical reactions that turn carbon dioxide into ethylene and other products.
Each $7,500 grant allows high schoolers to solve real-world problems with technological solutions.
Extraction of nickel, an essential component of clean energy technologies, needs stronger policies to protect local environments and communities, MIT researchers say.
Researchers across MIT are working on ways to boost food production and help crops survive drought.
The scientists’ wide-scale acoustic mapping technique could help track vulnerable keystone species.
As climate change accelerates sea-level rise and intensifies storms, marsh-fronted seawalls can provide an economical coastal defense, MIT engineers report.
One of the largest MIT clubs sees itself as “the umbrella of all things related to energy and climate on campus.”
A new study of bubbles on electrode surfaces could help improve the efficiency of electrochemical processes that produce fuels, chemicals, and materials.
Because it doesn’t need expensive energy storage for times without sunshine, the technology could provide communities with drinking water at low costs.
MIT researchers identify facility-level factors that could worsen heat impacts for incarcerated people.
The major effort to accelerate practical climate change solutions launches as its mission directors meet the Institute community.
Professor Ronald Prinn reflects on how far sustainability has come as a discipline, and where it all began at MIT.