New 3D printing technique creates unique objects quickly and with less waste
By using a 3D printer like an iron, researchers can precisely control the color, shade, and texture of fabricated objects, using only one material.
By using a 3D printer like an iron, researchers can precisely control the color, shade, and texture of fabricated objects, using only one material.
Collaborative multi-university team will pursue new AI-enhanced design tools and high-throughput testing methods for next-generation turbomachinery.
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’s innovation and entrepreneurship system helps launch water, food, and ag startups with social and economic benefits.
The innovations map the ocean floor and the brain, prevent heat stroke and cognitive injury, expand AI processing and quantum system capabilities, and introduce new fabrication approaches.
MIT researchers speed up a novel AI-based estimator for medication manufacturing by 60 times.
The interlocking bricks, which can be repurposed many times over, can withstand similar pressures as their concrete counterparts.
MIT startup AeroShield has opened a new facility for manufacturing highly insulating windows that will reduce building energy use and cut carbon emissions.
Through MIT’s 2N Program and the MIT-WHOI Joint Program, active duty naval officers gain the technical skills they need to lead projects in the Navy.
Mechatronics combines electrical and mechanical engineering, but above all else it’s about design.
Rising senior and Army ROTC cadet Alexander Edwards and Aneal Krishnan ’02 discuss a new UROP fellowship with the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies.
Professor Ellen Roche is creating the next generation of medical devices to help repair hearts, lungs, and other tissues.
MIT students who participated in the pilot program developed tools to rapidly screen for novel biosynthetic capabilities.
The new device, which can be implanted under the skin, rapidly releases naloxone when an overdose is detected.