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Students gather around a display of a coral reef at an MIT event

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Alternative FuelsWasteClear All
PostNovember 13, 2025

From nanoscale to global scale: Advancing MIT’s special initiatives in ma...

MIT News
Left to right: MIT President Emeritus L Rafael Reif, MIT.nano faculty director Professor Vladimir Bulović, and Ray Stata ’57, SM ’58 view a celebration of Robert Noyce’s life and accomplishments on the MIT.nano digital gallery. Made possible through a gift by Stata, MIT.nano’s cleanroom has been named the Robert N. Noyce (1953) Cleanroom.
PostNovember 12, 2025

MIT senior turns waste from the fishing industry into biodegradable plastic...

MIT News
A person holds a translucent rectangle of material with scale-like shapes on it.
PostNovember 5, 2025

What should countries do with their nuclear waste?

MIT News
The researchers also investigated the effect of environmental regulations and technologies related to I-129 management, to illuminate the tradeoffs associated with different approaches around the world.
PostOctober 29, 2025

Burning things to make things

MIT Department of Mechanical Engineering
Associate Professor Sili Deng
PostOctober 15, 2025

MIT engineers solve the sticky-cell problem in bioreactors and other indust...

MIT News
To test their setup, researchers allowed algae cells to stick to the surface of the photobioreactor. When they applied a voltage, the bubbles separated the cells from the surfaces without harming them.
PostOctober 8, 2025

How to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from ammonia production

MIT Energy Initiative
MIT researchers have proposed an approach for combined blue-green ammonia production that minimizes waste products and, when combined with some other simple upgrades, could reduce the greenhouse emissions from ammonia production by as much as 63 percent, compared to the leading “low-emissions” approach being used today.
PostOctober 1, 2025

Palladium filters could enable cheaper, more efficient generation of hydrog...

MIT News
Palladium plug membrane at the end of the membrane fabrication process (left). Dashed green lines outline the membrane. Scanning electron microscopy image of the membrane shows the palladium plugs embedded inside the pores of the silica support (right).
PostSeptember 29, 2025

A beacon of light

Department of Urban Studies and Planning MIT
Marcelo Coelho (left) and the Geolectric Lantern
PostSeptember 4, 2025

A greener way to 3D print stronger stuff

MIT News
A new software and hardware toolkit called SustainaPrint can help users strategically combine strong and weak filaments to achieve the best of both worlds. Instead of printing an entire object with high-performance plastic, the system analyzes a model, predicts where the object is most likely to experience stress, and reinforces those zones with stronger material.
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.

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