HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • City makes bricks out of volcanic ash and plastic to rebuild following volcano eruption

    In the aftermath of a recent volcano eruption in the Philippines, residents are using a volcanic by-product along with plastic waste to rebuild damaged and destroyed structures there.

  • KAIST researchers improve speed of robot butler

    Researchers from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) have developed a robotic butler capable of transporting drinks to humans at a faster rate than similar robots.

  • Valve positioner with explosion-proof housing for use with natural gas applications

    The valve positioner is designed as an option to deliver safe, stable and accurate control of rotary and linear valves in applications using sweet natural gas in hazardous environments.

  • Teenagers' thrill seeking impulses can lead to cyber crime

    Researchers from Flinders Criminology conducted a study that analyzed existing links between teenager’s online activities and cybercrime.

  • Tri-State pivots to renewable energy as coal plants close

    Combined, the new generating resources will result in more than 1 gigawatt of renewable resource capacity added to Tri-State’s power supply portfolio by 2024.

  • Wind sprints toward a looming deadline

    The expected expiration of the U.S. production tax credit at the end of 2020 is driving the large wind capacity addition.

  • Watch the in-flight abort test of a Crew Dragon spacecraft

    SpaceX and NASA moved closer to restoring the agency’s ability to deliver crew to the International Space Station with a successful unmanned test of an emergency abort system for the Crew Dragon capsule.

  • UK engineers prototype 3D-printed, sensor-operated prosthesis for toddlers

    The device is lightweight, has soft grip fingers and a seven-channel pediatric armband fitted with motion sensors.

  • ResMed settles kickback lawsuits and false claims allegations

    The company agreed to pay $37.5 million as settlement for five whistleblower lawsuits.

  • Tracking wildlife diversity with environmental DNA

    The potential for environmental DNA analysis to provide a more cost-effective means of animal identification and monitoring relative to camera trapping was examined.

  • Mapping Europe's marine gas hydrate deposits

    These resources offer potential to replace Europe’s dwindling conventional gas reserves and mitigate the growing dependence on natural gas imports.

  • Eco-friendly fracking fluid could bolster geothermal energy

    An eco-friendly fracturing fluid leverages lower pressures to fracture highly impermeable rocks in enhanced geothermal systems.

  • Early-stage pumped hydro project gets a boost from FERC

    Project developers plan to use solar and wind energy to pump water to the upper reservoir, then release it through turbines to generate 10 hours of renewable energy each day.

  • Purdue researchers develop edible security tag for pharmaceuticals

    A team of researchers from Purdue University are attempting to protect prescription drugs from counterfeiting using an edible security tag.

  • Consortium creates fluorescent tech for sorting recyclables

    A U.K. consortium has developed identification technology to help distinguish and separate food grade plastic packaging from non-food grade plastic packaging in recycling facilities to reduce plastic waste and improve recycling efforts.

  • Canister designed for transfer of hotter used nuclear fuel

    Each canister accepts heat loads of up to 50 kW so that used fuel can be transferred to secure dry storage after a shorter period of time.

  • Study: The growing impact of human pressure on world wildlife

    The assessment considers the extent of intense human pressures across 20,529 terrestrial vertebrate species’ geographic ranges.

  • Wearable gas sensor could revolutionize health or environmental monitoring

    The device could be worn by military in war zones or by industrial workers to detect potential leaks.

  • Cool information from Fujipoly

    Fujipoly added an Engineering Resource section to its website, providing engineers access to useful whitepapers and webinars as well as to Sarcon thermal interface material performance datasheets.

  • Video: Battery generates clean power for rural users

    The reusable battery is assembled with commonly available materials – iron, water, coffee filters and carbon felt – and can power an LED bulb for five hours or charge a cell phone.

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