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Climate News at MIT

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EnergyBatteries, Storage & TransmissionClear All
PostSeptember 17, 2025

Working to make fusion a viable energy source

MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
George Tynan is excited to tackle what he calls “the big physics and engineering challenges of fusion plasmas” at NSE, and to explore robust engineering solutions for practical fusion energy.
PostSeptember 16, 2025

Household-Level Responses to the European Energy Crisis

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
Image of a lightbulb against a pile of Euros
PostSeptember 16, 2025

Decoding the sounds of battery formation and degradation

MIT Department of Chemical Engineering
The MIT researchers used a customized experimental platform to simultaneously record acoustic emissions and perform electrochemical tests on lithium ion batteries.
PostSeptember 12, 2025

Lidar helps gas industry find methane leaks and avoid costly losses

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Methane plumes, as detected by Gas Mapping Lidar, overlay imagery of a gas production site.
PostAugust 28, 2025

New self-assembling material could be the key to recyclable EV batteries

MIT News
A depiction of batteries made with MIT researchers’ new electrolyte material, which is made from a class of molecules that self-assemble in water, named aramid amphiphiles (AAs), whose chemical structures and stability mimic Kevlar.
PostAugust 27, 2025

Fikile Brushett named director of MIT chemical engineering practice school

MIT Department of Chemical Engineering
Professor Fikile Brushett
PostAugust 27, 2025

New method could monitor corrosion and cracking in a nuclear reactor

MIT News
“If we can improve materials for a nuclear reactor, it means we can extend the life of that reactor,” says Ericmoore Jossou.
PostAugust 27, 2025

Addressing Uncertainty in the Joint Production of Energy Transition Metals

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
conveyor belt of mined material for sorting
PostAugust 22, 2025

Transforming boating, with solar power

MIT News
A group of visitors sets off from the dock for a cruise around the Charles River. The Anita weighs about 2,800 pounds and can accommodate six passengers at a time.
PostAugust 14, 2025

Study sheds light on graphite’s lifespan in nuclear reactors

MIT News
New research uncovered a link between properties of graphite and how the material behaves in response to radiation. “It seems like after graphite is irradiated for so long, it starts recovering,” says Sean Fayfar.

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