HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Battery Storage Bolsters Renewable Energy Grid

    A hybrid renewable energy storage project will replace two-thirds of an island’s fossil fuel needs.

  • Prefab Structures Built within Days

    Structures may vary in size depending largely on the client’s budget and available space.

  • Rainfall Collection Could Lower Potable Water Use by 25%

    Capturing rainwater can help to reduce the demands on the water treatment system and ensure that it will still function properly during heavy rainfall events.

  • Laser-Based Aircraft Tracking Could Aid Relief Efforts

    Hyperion could allow drones engaged in disaster monitoring and other humanitarian missions to send detailed images more rapidly back to the ground for analysis.

  • Device Eliminates Switching-Related Derailments

    Repoint uses an arrangement of intermeshing rail ends combined with a lift-and-drop mechanism that provides a locking system with virtually no friction loss.

  • Chip-Embedded Carts Give Retailers Marketing Data

    The sensors that are installed in carts and baskets emit a short wave signal via Bluetooth to a set of receivers located in the ceiling, which in turn send the information to the cloud.

  • Autonomous Vehicles Adapt to Infrastructure Challenges

    Infrastructure owners can do a few things to make an autonomous car’s job easier, but the onus is on self-driving vehicles to adapt.

  • Wave Energy: Chasing the Big One

    The U.S. Department of Energy is trying to nudge wave energy toward a design convergence with its Wave Energy Prize program.

  • Nanotexturing Used to Double Graphene's Light Absorption

    Graphene is known for its electrical conductivity and mechanical strength, it also must harness light (and heat) effectively.

  • Europe’s Largest Floating PV Array Goes Up in London

    The energy produced will be used to help provide low-cost power for a nearby water treatment facility.

  • Citywide Building Energy Model Created for Boston

    Researchers have generated a model that estimates the gas and electricity demand of every building in Boston for every hour of every day of the year.

  • Airplane Lavatory Self-Cleans Using Far Ultraviolet Light

    UV Lights are positioned throughout the lavatory so that it floods all touch surfaces—toilet seat, sink and countertops—once a person exits the lavatory.

  • Three-Quarters of Americans “Afraid” to Ride in Self-Driving Car

    While only a small minority of Americans trust an autonomous vehicle to drive itself, AAA’s survey reveals that consumer demand for semi-autonomous vehicle technology is nonetheless high.

  • "Super Engine" Could Yield 50% Fuel-Efficiency Gains

    The new engine combines two technologies—gasoline compression ignition and opposed pistons—that could fundamentally change the way internal combustion engines work.

  • Carbon Nanotubes Improve Metal’s Longevity Under Radiation

    Even before exposure to radiation, the addition of this small amount of nanotubes improves the strength of the material by 50%.

  • Biofuels from Algae Boosted by NREL Refinery Process

    Economic production of algal biofuel is a major challenge, and the Department of Energy has made reducing the costs of algae production a priority.

  • World's First Floating LNG Facility Ready to Set Sail

    The ship is a game changer, as it paves the way for opportunities to monetize gas resources from remote, marginal and stranded fields.

  • Nepal to Build Earthquake-Resistant Structures with Bamboo

    Over the last 15 years, a number of modern bamboo building systems have been developed that meet ISO standards and have excellent anti-seismic properties.

  • Feasibility of "Printing" Replacement Tissue Shown

    The precision of 3D printing makes it a promising method for replicating the body's complex tissues and organs.

  • Carbon-Negative Electric Vehicles?

    The project builds upon a solar thermal electrochemical process that can create carbon nanofibers from ambient carbon dioxide.

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