Post Masonry – Style 2

This unassuming material is capable of capturing or releasing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in response to moisture swings.

Pulling carbon dioxide out of the air using moisture

This unassuming material is capable of capturing or releasing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in

A more efficient way to capture fresh water from the air

Researchers captured water droplets exhibiting complex collective motion, oscillating between serpentine and circular motions, as

Bringing transformative potential to agriculture with a natural technology for ‘dimming’ genes

Keerti Rathore stands in his lab with ultra-low gossypol cotton plants that were created using

Staving off coral reef collapse via a new technique

via University of Florida Staving off coral reef collapse via a new technique In a

Producing energy from evaporating tap or seawater with new nanoscale devices

EPFL researchers have discovered that nanoscale devices harnessing the hydroelectric effect can harvest electricity from

Setting the stage for regenerative therapy by turning skin cells into limb cells

Atsuta and his colleagues confirmed that the fibroblasts were successfully reprogrammed into cells that can

Robots and cameras of the future could be made of liquid crystals

Alvin Modin with liquid crystal devices in the lab at the Krieger School of Arts

A new way to alter the DNA of bacterial cells using electricity instead of harsh chemicals to manufacture life-saving medicines

Plasmid DNA entering the E. coli cell after exposure to 18GHz electro magnetic energy. Credit:

A reprogrammable light-based computer processor

The team’s reprogrammable light-based processor. Credit: Will Wright, RMIT University A reprogrammable light-based computer processor

Could this be the key to sustainable foods that have both the ‘right’ texture and require minimal processing?

A closed photo bioreactor where micro algae are cultivated in glass tubes (credit: File:Photobioreactor PBR 4000

A 3D printed metamaterial could change how we make everything from medical implants to aircraft or rocket parts

PhD candidate Jordan Noronha holding a sample of the new titanium lattice structure 3D printed

Imagine being able to build an entire dialysis machine using nothing more than a 3D printer

MIT researchers modified a multi-material 3D printer so it could produce three-dimensional solenoids in one