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IBM Research

IBM Research is a research and development organization consisting of twelve laboratories, worldwide.

Dramatically cutting energy use in computing with a simple superconducting device

A new mobile app to detect Alzheimer’s using speech data

Ultra-Thin Artificial Neurons Mimic Biological Processes for Advanced AI Problem-Solving

Going optical instead of electronic to speed up computation by up to 1000 times at 1 trillion operations per second

2 nanometer chip technology from IBM brings 45 percent higher performance or 75 percent lower energy use to computing

AI coming to the rescue in the race to new antibiotics?

Quantum photonics: Promising a new era in optical circuits

Transforming electronics, biosensors and more with a metal-breathing bacteria

A new battery charges in 5 minutes and uses materials derived from seawater not heavy metals

Today, IBM Research is building on a long history of materials science innovation to unveil a new battery discovery. This new research could help eliminate the need for heavy metals in battery production and transform the long-term sustainability of many elements of our energy infrastructure. As battery-powered alternatives for everything from vehicles to smart energy

A new battery charges in 5 minutes and uses materials derived from seawater not heavy metals

First proof that quantum computers do indeed offer advantages over conventional computers

Quantum computers promise to revolutionize the future of computing. A scientist from the Technical University of Munich (TUM) together with his colleagues from the University of Waterloo and from IBM have now demonstrated for the first time that quantum computers do indeed offer advantages over conventional computers. For many years, quantum computers were not much

First proof that quantum computers do indeed offer advantages over conventional computers

A synthetic molecule that can kill five deadly types of multidrug-resistant bacteria with limited, if any, side effects

An international research team led by the Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (IBN) of the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) and IBM Research developed a synthetic molecule that can kill five deadly types of multidrug-resistant bacteria with limited, if any, side effects. Their new material could be developed into an antimicrobial drug to treat patients with antibioticresistant infections.

A synthetic molecule that can kill five deadly types of multidrug-resistant bacteria with limited, if any, side effects

Emerging Technologies Could Greatly Reduce Plastic Waste

Most of the 150 million tons of plastics produced around the world every year end up in landfills, the oceans and elsewhere. Less than 9 percent of plastics are recycled in the United States, rising to about 30 percent in Europe. That’s a $176 billion problem, the potential energy savings scientists say could be achieved

Emerging Technologies Could Greatly Reduce Plastic Waste

Tiny redox flow battery to power and cool future computers and electronics

In the future, a new type of tiny redox flow battery will supply tightly packed electronic components with energy, while also dissipating the heat they produce. Researchers at ETH Zurich and IBM Research Zurich have built a tiny redox flow battery. This means that future computer chip stacks – in which individual chips are stacked

Tiny redox flow battery to power and cool future computers and electronics

2D materials unlock an entire new field of research full of surprises

A new study by an international team of researchers led by the University of Minnesota highlights how manipulation of 2D materials could make our modern day devices faster, smaller, and better. The findings are now online and will be published in Nature Materials, a leading scientific journal of materials science and engineering research. Two-dimensional materials

2D materials unlock an entire new field of research full of surprises

Artificial neurons: You’ve got a nerve

Narrowing the gap between biological brains and electronic ones SINCE nobody really knows how brains work, those researching them must often resort to analogies. A common one is that a brain is a sort of squishy, imprecise, biological version of a digital computer. But analogies work both ways, and computer scientists have a long history

Artificial neurons: You’ve got a nerve

IBM Lab-on-a-Chip Breakthrough Aims to Help Physicians Detect Cancer Before Symptoms Appear

IBM scientists have developed a new lab-on-a-chip technology that can, for the first time, separate biological particles at the nanoscale and could enable physicians to detect diseases such as cancer before symptoms appear. As reported today in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, the IBM team’s results show size-based separation of bioparticles down to 20 nanometers (nm) in

IBM Lab-on-a-Chip Breakthrough Aims to Help Physicians Detect Cancer Before Symptoms Appear

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