New 3D printing method enables complex designs and creates less waste
MIT engineers developed a technique for making intricate structures with supports that can be dissolved and reused instead of thrown away.
MIT engineers developed a technique for making intricate structures with supports that can be dissolved and reused instead of thrown away.
2.797/2.798 (Molecular Cellular and Tissue Biomechanics) explores the intersection of mechanics and biology.
A new method could enable stretchable ceramics, glass, and metals, for tear-proof textiles or stretchy semiconductors.
TactStyle, a system developed by CSAIL researchers, uses image prompts to replicate both the visual appearance and tactile properties of 3D models.
A collaborative network of makerspaces has spread from MIT across the country, helping communities make their own products.
“InteRecon” enables users to capture items in a mobile app and reconstruct their interactive features in mixed reality. The tool could assist in education, medical environments, museums, and more.
Inaugural cohort of Tecnológico de Monterrey undergraduates participate in immersive practicum at MIT featuring desktop fiber-extrusion devices, or FrEDs.
In a new class, students design, build, and test an electric turbopump for a rocket engine, facing challenges they will experience as practicing engineers.
“Xstrings” method enables users to produce cable-driven objects, automatically assembling bionic robots, sculptures, and dynamic fashion designs.
MIT engineers developed a way to grow artificial tissues that look and act like their natural counterparts.
Ideal for propelling tiny satellites, the lightweight devices could be produced on board a spacecraft and cost much less than traditional thrusters.
With technology developed at MIT, 6K is helping to bring critical materials production back to the U.S. without toxic byproducts.
Builders pour concrete into temporary molds called formwork. MIT researchers invented a way to make these structures out of on-site soil.
New research shows the filter-feeders strike a natural balance between permeability and selectivity that could inform design of water treatment systems.
A new design tool uses UV and RGB lights to change the color and textures of everyday objects. The system could enable surfaces to display dynamic patterns, such as health data and fashion designs.