Putting food-safety detection in the hands of consumers
Simple, scalable wireless system uses the RFID tags on billions of products to sense contamination.
Simple, scalable wireless system uses the RFID tags on billions of products to sense contamination.
Infinite Cooling, a startup from the Varanasi Research Group, was a $100K Diamond Winner at the MassChallenge Awards.
Fourth annual Tata Center Symposium highlights the need to invest in technologies for the developing world from a market-driven perspective.
Researchers from across MIT showcase J-WAFS-funded projects tackling critical water and food systems challenges from solutions-oriented perspectives.
Machine-learning model provides risk assessment for complex nonlinear systems, including boats and offshore platforms.
MIT report highlights challenges and opportunities for conserving natural resources and stabilizing the climate.
Prizes went to solutions for improving water filtration systems, metal fatigue resistance, and boron production.
Emphasizing the scope and interdisciplinary mission on which it was founded, J-WAFS has a new name: the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab.
Experiments show shifting ripple patterns can signal times of environmental flux.
Solutions grants will aid commercialization of novel MIT technologies to test water safety and improve agricultural productivity.
In a novel system developed by MIT researchers, underwater sonar signals cause vibrations that can be decoded by an airborne receiver.
MIT student group welcomes an all-black, all-female team who had been targeted by racist and misogynistic members of an infamous online forum.
Graduate students receive J-WAFS fellowships to support research focused on improving water access for rural as well as urban communities.
One of the world’s most densely populated regions may push the boundaries of habitability by the end of this century, study finds.
Powered only by solar energy, a new device developed at MIT could provide relief to regions where water is scare.