Prof. Angela Belcher named among 100 agents of change in the world by Rolling Stone Magazine.
Read on: ‘The 100 People Who Are Changing America”
Prof. Angela Belcher named among 100 agents of change in the world by Rolling Stone Magazine.
Read on: ‘The 100 People Who Are Changing America”
The way Angela Belcher sees it, nature could do a lot more, if only given the opportunity.
Read on: “Turning on Virus Power”
Congratulations to Dr. Ahmad Khalil for successful completion of his Ph.D. with thesis entitled “Biology’s Wires and Motors: Single-Molecule Mechanics of M13 Bacteriophage and Kinesin“.
When 40-year-old materials chemist Angela Belcher was a child, she wanted to be an inventor. “I would try to build things out of scrap material that we had in the garage,” she says. To her disappointment, everything she made had already been invented. Then, in college, she “fell in love with large molecules” and found a whole new way to build things.
Read on: “3 People Who Are Pushing the Edge of Science”
Forget 9-volts, AAs, AAAs or D batteries: The energy for tomorrow’s miniature electronic devices could come from tiny microbatteries about half the size of a human cell and built with viruses.
MIT’s Angela Belcher, a former winner of PopSci’s Brillant 10, is developing new materials that could lead to gadgets that mend their cracks when dropped on the floor, and won’t die if exposed to water.
Read on: “From Abalone to Self-healing gadgets”
An MIT materials scientist’s research on sea snails has helped transform battery technology and may end the era when cell phones die if they’re dropped and PDAs must be replaced if they get dunked in the tub.
Read on: “Eureka! Shell Shock”
Congratulations to Dr. Chung-Yi Chiang on the successful completion of his Ph.D. with thesis entitled “Assembly of Biological Building Blocks for Nano- and Micro-fabrications of Materials“.
Congratulations to Dr. Stephen Thomas Kottmann on the successful completion of his Ph.D. with thesis entitled “Molecular Simulation of Biomaterials and Biomolecules at the Solid-Liquid Interface“.
Congratulations to Dr. Sreekar Bhaviripudi on the successful completion of his Ph.D. with thesis entitled “Ordered arrays of nanocrystals : synthesis, properties and applications“.