Reporte #151

 

A new approach to rechargeable batteries

MIT News – Engineering

New metal-mesh membrane could solve longstanding problems and lead to inexpensive power storage.

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Smart valve-train technology could breathe new life into internal combustion engine

The Engineer

The UK inventors of an innovative valve-train technology which dispenses with the traditional camshaft claim it could radically improve petrol engine performance. Jon Excell reports.

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Engineers design artificial synapse for “brain-on-a-chip” hardware

MIT News – Engineering

Design is major stepping stone toward portable artificial-intelligence devices.

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Making fuel cells for a fraction of the cost

Science Daily

New material creates fuel cell catalysts at a hundredth of the cost. Researchers now describe the development of an inexpensive, efficient catalyst material for a type of fuel cell called a polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell, which turns the chemical energy of hydrogen into electricity and is among the most promising fuel cell types to power cars and electronics.

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Graphene girders extend the life of lithium-ion batteries

The Engineer

Nanoscale reinforcement with graphene girders boosts performance of silicon anodes, Warwick team discovers.

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Tesla’s Massive Battery in South Australia Made $1 Million AUD in Only a Few Days

Interesting Engineering

Tesla’s Powerpack in South Australia is not only stabilizing the grid it’s turning a huge profit too.

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Organic Thin-Film Transistors’ New Gate Dielectric Opens Door to Future Electronics

IEEE Spectrum Recent Content

Thin-film transistors (TFT) form the foundation for many of today’s technologies, including smartphones and flat-panel TVs. And these TFTs are made possible by amorphous silicon. While this material has managed to do the trick for the most part, it does have some performance limitations, such as limited carrier mobility, that have sent researchers in search of something better.

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The Boring Company Presents Plans for 6.5-Mile LA Tunnel to City Council and Public

Interesting Engineering

The SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s famous underground tunnel project might finally win over the people of a city very hesitant to support it.

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Temporary ‘bathtub drains’ in the ocean concentrate flotsam

Science Daily

An experiment using hundreds of plastic drifters in the Gulf of Mexico shows that rather than simply spread out, as current calculations would predict, many of them clumped together in a tight cluster.

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Flushing out ‘zombie cells’ could help stave off Parkinson’s, study suggests

The Guardian

Possible approach to treating effects of neurodegenerative diseases – and even ageing – revealed by trial.

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Photon-friendly graphene membranes mimic photosynthesis to produce hydrogen

The Engineer

Graphene membranes that mimic photosynthesis to produce hydrogen by harvesting solar energy could be developed following the discovery of a new effect.

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World’s first electric container barges to sail from European ports this summer

The Guardian

Dubbed the ‘Tesla of the canals’, the unmanned vessels will operate on Dutch and Belgian waterways, vastly reducing diesel vehicles and emissions.

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Atom-Thin Memristors Discovered

IEEE Spectrum Recent Content

Two-dimensional atom-thin materials are good for a lot of things, but they don’t make good memory devices. At least that’s what everyone thought until Ruijing Ge, a first-year graduate student at the University of Texas, Austin, persuaded her mentor—flexible electronics guru Deji Akinwande—to let her try. They sandwiched an atom-thick layer of molybdenum disulfide between two electrodes and found that, contrary to expectation, the structure displayed memristance; it can be set to a high resistance or low resistance state by particular voltages and remain stable long after the voltage is removed.

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