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    Released: 31-Jul-2013 10:55 AM EDT
    Key Factors for Wireless Power Transfer
    American Institute of Physics (AIP)

    What happens to a resonant wireless power transfer system in complex electromagnetic environments? Researchers explored the influences at play in this type of situation and describe in AIP Advances how efficient wireless power transfer can be achieved in the presence of metal plates.

    Released: 31-Jul-2013 9:00 AM EDT
    Biodiversity and Biofuels: U-M Researchers Land $2m Grant to 'Cooperate with Nature' on Growing Algae for Energy
    University of Michigan

    A team of University of Michigan researchers has been awarded a $2 million federal grant to identify and test naturally diverse groups of green algae that can be grown together to create a high-yield, environmentally sustainable and cost-effective system to produce next-generation biofuels.

    Released: 29-Jul-2013 5:00 PM EDT
    Clad in Controversy
    IEEE Spectrum Magazine

    The first of a controversial new class of guided-missle destroyers is nearing completion.

    Released: 26-Jul-2013 8:00 AM EDT
    Glass Scaffolds Help Heal Bone, Show Promise as Weight-Bearing Implants
    Missouri University of Science and Technology

    Researchers at Missouri University of Science and Technology have developed a type of glass implant that could one day be used to repair injured bones in the arms, legs and other areas of the body that are most subject to the stresses of weight.

    17-Jul-2013 9:50 AM EDT
    Elastic Electronics: Stretchable Gold Conductor Grows Its Own Wires
    University of Michigan

    Networks of spherical nanoparticles embedded in elastic materials may make the best stretchy conductors yet, engineering researchers at the University of Michigan have discovered.

    Released: 16-Jul-2013 10:00 AM EDT
    Long-Buried Seawall Protected Homes From Hurricane Sandy's Record Storm Surge
    Virginia Tech

    Two beachfront communities in New Jersey were hit hard by Hurricane Sandy, but one fared much better than the other thanks to a long-forgotten seawall buried beneath the sand, according to Virginia Tech researchers.

    Released: 8-Jul-2013 11:00 AM EDT
    A Nano-Tool for Designing the Next Big Battery
    Michigan Technological University

    It’s a jungle down there at batteries’ atomic level, with ions whacking into electrodes and eventually causing failure. Now, a Michigan Technological University scientist has developed a device that lets researchers spy on the actions of lithium ions inside a nanobattery—and use that data to develop better, longer-lasting batteries to power everything from electric cars to cell phones.

    Released: 20-Jun-2013 4:35 PM EDT
    Building Operating System Provides Brain for Smarter Cities
    Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

    Innovative machine learning technology developed by Columbia Engineering is the driving force—in effect, the brain—behind Di-BOSS™, a new digital building operating system that integrates all building operating systems into one, easy-to-use cockpit control interface for desktops and portable devices. The system has been successfully piloted in NYC by Rudin Management, saving them energy costs and resources.

    Released: 4-Jun-2013 2:45 PM EDT
    Spintronics Approach Enables New Quantum Technologies
    University of Chicago

    A team of researchers including members of the University of Chicago’s Institute for Molecular Engineering highlight the power of emerging quantum technologies in two recent papers published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

    Released: 4-Jun-2013 1:20 PM EDT
    Tiny Airplanes and Subs From University of Florida Laboratory Could Be Next Hurricane Hunters
    University of Florida

    Kamran Mohseni envisions a day when the unmanned vehicles in his laboratory at the University of Florida will swarm over, under and through hurricanes to help predict the strength and path of the storms.

    Released: 4-Jun-2013 11:00 AM EDT
    Wi-Fi Signals Enable Gesture Recognition Throughout Entire Home
    University of Washington

    University of Washington researchers have shown it's possible to leverage Wi-Fi signals around us to detect specific movements without needing sensors on the human body or cameras. Using a Wi-Fi router and a few wireless devices in the living room, users could control their electronic devices from any room in the home with a simple gesture.

    Released: 31-May-2013 12:00 PM EDT
    Even with Defects, Graphene Is Strongest Material in the World
    Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

    Columbia Engineering researchers demonstrate that graphene, even if stitched together from many small crystalline grains, is almost as strong as graphene in its perfect crystalline form. This resolves a contradiction between theoretical simulations, which predicted grain boundaries can be strong, and earlier experiments, which indicated they were much weaker than the perfect lattice.

    Released: 28-May-2013 3:30 PM EDT
    U.S. Oil Predictions Inspire Next Generation of Petroleum Engineers
    Texas Tech University

    Texas Tech welcomes oil boom with new building and modern research facilities.

    Released: 23-May-2013 4:00 PM EDT
    Fastest Measurements Ever Made of Ion Channel Proteins
    Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

    Columbia Engineering researchers have used miniaturized electronics to measure the activity of individual ion-channel proteins with temporal resolution as fine as one microsecond, producing the fastest recordings of single ion channels ever performed.

    Released: 23-May-2013 10:00 AM EDT
    Stitching Defects Into World’s Thinnest Semiconductor
    Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

    Columbia University researchers have grown high-quality crystals of molybdenum disulfide, the world’s thinnest semiconductor, and studied how these crystals stitch together at the atomic scale to form continuous sheets, gaining key insights into the optical and electronic properties of this new “wonder” material.

    Released: 20-May-2013 12:00 PM EDT
    “Out of This World” Space Stethoscope Valuable on Earth, Too
     Johns Hopkins University

    A team of students at has designed a new stethoscope for NASA to deliver accurate heart- and body-sounds to medics trying to assess astronauts’ health on long missions in noisy spacecraft.

    Released: 16-May-2013 10:25 AM EDT
    DNA-Guided Assembly Yields Novel Ribbon-Like Nanostructures
    Brookhaven National Laboratory

    DNA “linker” strands coax nano-sized rods to line up in way unlike any other spontaneous arrangement of rod-shaped objects. The arrangement—with the rods forming “rungs” on ladder-like ribbons could result in the fabrication of new nanostructured materials with desired properties.

    Released: 15-May-2013 12:00 PM EDT
    Engineering Undergrads Create Game-Changing Asthma Management Device
    Washington University in St. Louis

    An estimated 300 million people in the world suffer from asthma. That number is expected to grow to more than 400 million by 2025. While diagnosis and treatment in the United States is accessible, people living in the developing world have a much more difficult time. Thanks to a new product being developed by engineering students at Washington University in St. Louis, those millions of people may have new hope.

    Released: 15-May-2013 7:00 AM EDT
    Iowa State Engineers Design, Test Taller, High-Strength Concrete Towers for Wind Turbines
    Iowa State University

    Iowa State engineers have designed and tested a concept for concrete towers to replace the steel towers used for wind turbines. The concrete towers could be a practical way to raise turbine towers from today's 80 meters to the better winds at 100 meters or higher.

    Released: 13-May-2013 9:05 AM EDT
    Solar Panels as Inexpensive as Paint?
    University at Buffalo

    Researchers are helping develop a new generation of photovoltaic cells that produce more power and cost less to manufacture than what’s available today.

    Released: 9-May-2013 8:55 AM EDT
    University, Police to Develop UAVs for Campus Security
    University of Alabama Huntsville

    With campus safety and security in mind, engineering students at The University of Alabama in Huntsville are working with the campus police department to perfect unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) technologies for use on-campus.

       
    Released: 8-May-2013 11:00 AM EDT
    Graphene Quantum Dots May Someday Tell if It Will Rain on Mars
    Kansas State University

    The latest research from a Kansas State University chemical engineer may help improve humidity and pressure sensors, particularly those used in outer space.

    Released: 5-May-2013 11:00 PM EDT
    Microwave Oven Cooks Up Solar Cell Material
    University of Utah

    University of Utah metallurgists used an old microwave oven to produce a nanocrystal semiconductor rapidly using cheap, abundant and less toxic metals than other semiconductors. They hope it will be used for more efficient photovoltaic solar cells and LED lights, biological sensors and systems to convert waste heat to electricity.

    25-Apr-2013 9:00 AM EDT
    Microchip Proves Tightness Provokes Precocious Sperm Release
    Universite de Montreal

    Sperm cell release can be triggered by tightening the grip around the delivery organ, according to a team of nano and microsystems engineers and plant biologists at the University of Montreal and Concordia University.

    Released: 24-Apr-2013 5:00 PM EDT
    Columbia Engineers Generate World-Record mmWave Output Power from Nanoscale CMOS
    Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

    Harish Krishnaswamy, assistant professor of electrical engineering at Columbia Engineering, has generated a record amount of power output—by a power of five—using silicon-based nanoscale CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductor) technology for millimeter-wave power amplifiers. Power amplifiers are used in communications and sensor systems to boost power levels for reliable transmission of signals over long distances as required by the given application. Krishnaswamy’s research will be reported at the June 2013 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits Symposium.

    16-Apr-2013 11:00 PM EDT
    Hundreds of Aftershocks: Mine Disaster Bigger than Thought
    University of Utah

    A new University of Utah study has identified hundreds of previously unrecognized small aftershocks that happened after Utah’s deadly Crandall Canyon mine collapse in 2007. The aftershocks suggest the collapse was as big – and perhaps bigger – than shown in another study by the university in 2008.

    Released: 19-Apr-2013 8:00 AM EDT
    Researchers Develop Device to Mitigate Blackouts, Prevent Equipment Damage
    University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

    Engineering researchers at the University of Arkansas have developed equipment that will prevent rolling blackouts by regulating or limiting the amount of excess current that moves through the power grid when a surge occurs.

    Released: 18-Apr-2013 4:30 PM EDT
    Engineer Working to Put More Science Behind Bloodstain Pattern Analysis
    Iowa State University

    Daniel Attinger of Iowa State University is working to put more fluid dynamics behind the bloodstain pattern analysis used at crime scenes. His research team is developing instruments and methods to produce, study and analyze bloodstains.

    Released: 17-Apr-2013 1:00 PM EDT
    Student Inventors Bring Innovation to Indianapolis
    ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers)

    The American Society of Mechanical Engineers has announced the 2013IShow, featuring technology innovations from ten college design teams.

    Released: 16-Apr-2013 4:40 PM EDT
    Researchers Create Novel Optical Fibers
    University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

    Researchers at UW-Milwaukee have found a novel way to propagate multiple beams of light in a single strand of optical fiber. The discovery could increase the amount of information fiber optic cables can carry.

    Released: 14-Apr-2013 10:00 PM EDT
    NUS Team Develops World’s First Microfluidic Device for Rapid Separation and Detection of Non-Spherical Bioparticles
    National University of Singapore (NUS)

    A bioengineering research team from the National University of Singapore (NUS) team led by Associate Professor Zhang Yong has developed a novel microfluidic device for efficient, rapid separation and detection of non-spherical bioparticles.

    Released: 12-Apr-2013 2:00 PM EDT
    Edison2 Unveils New Very Light Car Architecture at The Henry Ford
    E2 Mobility

    Edison2, the winners of the 2010 Progressive Insurance Automotive X PRIZE, unveiled the their latest Very Light Car (VLC) inside Henry Ford Museum’s Driving America exhibit yesterday afternoon.

    Released: 12-Apr-2013 1:45 PM EDT
    New Device Could Cut Costs on Household Products, Pharmaceuticals
    University of Washington

    A new procedure that thickens and thins fluid at the micron level could save consumers and manufacturers money, particularly for soap products that depend on certain molecules to effectively deal with grease and dirt. Researchers at the University of Washington published their findings online April 9 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Released: 11-Apr-2013 3:00 PM EDT
    New Technique Measures Evaporation Globally
    Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

    Researchers at Columbia Engineering and Boston University have developed the first method to map evaporation globally using weather stations, which will help scientists evaluate water resource management, assess recent trends of evaporation throughout the globe, and validate surface hydrologic models in various conditions.

    9-Apr-2013 1:00 PM EDT
    Scientists Develop First Photonic Topological Insulators to Provide Protection for Transport of Light
    American Technion Society

    Technion researchers have developed and successfully demonstrated a photonic Floquet topological insulator, a new device used to protect the transport of light through a unique, lattice of ‘waveguides.’ This could play a key role in the photonics industry.

    Released: 9-Apr-2013 12:00 PM EDT
    Super Bikes to Compete at ASME’S Human Powered Vehicle Challenge
    ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers)

    Student engineering teams from 28 universities, including San Jose State University and eight other California higher learning institutues will compete in the 2013 ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) Human Powered Vehicle Challenge West to be held Apr. 12-14, in San Jose.

    Released: 4-Apr-2013 2:55 PM EDT
    Building Better Blood Vessels Could Advance Tissue Engineering
    University of Michigan

    One of the major obstacles to growing new organs—replacement hearts, lungs and kidneys—is the difficulty researchers face in building blood vessels that keep the tissues alive, but new findings from the University of Michigan could help overcome this roadblock.

    Released: 3-Apr-2013 5:00 PM EDT
    Rotary Valve Could Help Propel Craft to Mars One Day
    University of Alabama Huntsville

    A rotary fuel delivery valve developed by a UAHuntsville team led by Dr. James Blackmon just might help us get manned space flights out of our immediate neighborhood one day.

    Released: 29-Mar-2013 10:25 AM EDT
    SBU Mechanical Engineering Professor Invents Portable Mobility Assistant Device
    Stony Brook University

    State-of-the-art device to assist the elderly and disabled with sitting, standing and walking

    Released: 28-Mar-2013 9:00 AM EDT
    Researchers Unveil Large Robotic Jellyfish That One Day Could Patrol Oceans
    Virginia Tech

    Virginia Tech College of Engineering researchers have unveiled Cyro, a life-like, autonomous robotic jellyfish the size and weight of a grown man, 5 foot 7 inches in length and weighing 170 pounds.

    Released: 26-Mar-2013 3:25 PM EDT
    Backpack Mapping System Captures Intelligence in Tough-to-Get-to Places
    Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

    Engineers at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Md., have developed a portable device -- carried in a backpack -- that can be used to automatically create maps in tight spaces where GPS is not readily available – such as in underground areas and on ships.

    Released: 25-Mar-2013 5:00 PM EDT
    Nanofoams for Better Body Armor, Blast Protection
    University of California San Diego

    Engineers at the University of California, San Diego are developing nanofoams that could be used to make better body armor; prevent traumatic brain injury and blast-related lung injuries in soldiers; and protect buildings from impacts and blasts. It’s the first time researchers are investigating the use of nanofoams for structural protection.

    25-Mar-2013 10:40 AM EDT
    Wang’s Technology May Answer Host of Medical Questions
    Washington University in St. Louis

    In an engineering breakthrough, a Washington University in St. Louis biomedical researcher has discovered a way to use light and color to measure oxygen in individual red blood cells in real time.

    Released: 20-Mar-2013 4:00 PM EDT
    Porcupine Quills, Gecko Feet and Spider Webs Inspire Medical Materials
    NIH, National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)

    Nature’s designs are giving researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health ideas for new technologies that could help wounds heal, make injections less painful and provide new materials for a variety of purposes.

    14-Mar-2013 11:00 AM EDT
    Model Allows Engineers to Test Fuel Systems on Computers
    University of Alabama Huntsville

    Engineers will be able to design better fuel systems for everything from motorcycles to rockets faster and more inexpensively because of a mathematical fuels model developed at The University of Alabama in Huntsville.

    Released: 14-Mar-2013 4:20 PM EDT
    "War on Talent" Continues for Engineers in Europe
    IEEE Spectrum Magazine

    A low graduation rate and aging workforce are causing a "severe" shortage of technical professionals.

    Released: 14-Mar-2013 10:55 AM EDT
    Researchers Building Stronger, Greener Concrete with Biofuel Byproducts
    Kansas State University

    A group of Kansas State University civil engineers are adding bioethanol byproducts to cement to reduce concrete's carbon footprint and make it stronger.

    Released: 14-Mar-2013 8:55 AM EDT
    Test Drive of X Prize Winning Edison2 'Very Light Car' with Founder and CEO Oliver Kuttner
    E2 Mobility

    The innovative design of Edison2's 'Very Light Car' enabled the company to win the $5 million dollar X Prize competition for a passenger car achieving over 100 MPG. In this video, recorded on July 12th 2012, Oliver Kuttner, Edison2's founder and CEO, drives the Edison2 Very Light Car (VLC) around Lynchburg Virginia, the location of the company's headquarters.



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