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BuildingsWasteClear All
PostSeptember 21, 2021

Predicting building emissions across the US

MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub
Each region of the United States has unique characteristics that will cause building emissions to vary widely across the entire nation. An MIT team sought to understand — and respond to — these regional variations.
PostSeptember 16, 2021

Concrete’s role in reducing building and pavement emissions

MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub
By lowering concrete’s production emissions and using it in innovative ways, it’s possible to significantly cut the emissions of buildings and pavements in the United States.
PostSeptember 2, 2021

Mitigating hazards with vulnerability in mind

MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub
Ipek Bensu Manav (right) chats with Hessam AzariJafari, her colleague at the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub. During her time at CSHub, Manav has placed engineering in its social and political contexts and built new connections in the process.
PostSeptember 2, 2021

J-WAFS announces 2021 Solutions Grants for commercializing water and food t...

MIT News
MIT faculty who received 2021 J-WAFS Solutions grants include (top row, left to right) Daniel Frey, Leon Glicksman, Eric Verploegen; (bottom row, left to right) Greg Stephanopoulos, Anthony J. Sinskey, and Jongyoon Han.
PostAugust 22, 2021

Countering climate change with cool pavements

MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub
By selecting optimal paving materials, it may be possible to cut emissions in Boston by up to 3 percent over 50 years.
PostAugust 19, 2021

Solar panels are a pain to recycle. These companies are trying to fix that....

MIT Technology Review
PostAugust 10, 2021

Chemistry Undergraduate Teaching Lab hibernates fume hoods, drastically red...

MIT Safe & Sustainable Labs (S2L) Program
Fume hoods like these are placed into hibernation mode when they are no longer in use for the day. Since employing the use of hibernation mode, the unoccupied Undergraduate Teaching Lab air change rate has plummeted from 11 air changes per hour to seven ACH, drastically shrinking unnecessary energy outflow, saving MIT an estimated $21,000 per year.
PostAugust 4, 2021

Using graphene foam to filter toxins from drinking water

MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
A reusable 3D functionalized reduced graphene oxide foam (3D‐FrGOF) is used as an in situ electrolytic deposition electrode to extract uranium from contaminated water.
PostJuly 27, 2021

Investigating materials for safe, secure nuclear power

MIT News
A longstanding interest in radiation’s effects on metals has drawn Michael Short into new areas such as nuclear security and microreactors.
PostJuly 16, 2021

MIT.nano receives American Institute of Architects’s Top Ten Award for su...

MIT News
MIT.nano, MIT’s 216,000-square-foot, shared-access facility for nanoscience and nanotechnology research, has been awarded the American Institute of Architects (AIA) 2021 Committee on the Environment (COTE) Top Ten Award for excellence in sustainability and design.

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