News

Engineers developed a technique to grow and peel ultrathin 'skins' of electronic material that could be used in applications such as night-vision eyewear and autonomous driving in foggy conditions.
Researchers create an iontronic artificial skin that senses pressure, temperature, and current while learning patterns ...
Engineers have developed a technique to grow and peel ultrathin “skins” of electronic material. The method could pave the way ...
discovered that the pyroelectric film contains an orderly arrangement of lead atoms that have a large “electron affinity,” meaning that lead attracts electrons and prevents the charge carriers ...
The global effort to combat climate change requires expanding renewable energy technologies. To optimise solar cells, ...
Webb has two decades ahead of it, but it's already captured some stunning images. Here are 35 of our favorites.
A team of scientists from MIT introduced a novel strategy and manufacturing process called atomic lift-off that enables the ...
An electronic sensor "skin" grown by MIT engineers could revolutionize next-generation night vision and autonomous vehicles.
Strange metals challenge the 60-year-old theory that electric current consists of a flow of discrete charges. Strange metals ...
In new research published in Nature, Weizmann Institute scientists introduce a powerful tool to explore quantum phenomena—the ...