Prof. Stephen Forrest is developing an automated high-yield roll-to-roll process to manufacture organic LEDs for lighting.
Prof. Stephen Forrest is developing an automated high-yield roll-to-roll process to manufacture organic LEDs for lighting.
In congressional testimony, professor urges $370M in federal funding to replace outdated machines.
Professor Justin Kasper addresses Senate committee on solar threat to power grid.
The post Solar storm congressional testimony: ‘The risk is real’ appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
Graphs that are customized, stored locally, and able to change over time can enable faster and more accurate searching and digital assistants
Kasikci presents a method to improve a program’s ability to use data in a straightforward, efficient way
Take a look at some of the exciting new projects that will help define the next evolution of sustainable power and energy.
Prof. Johanna Mathieu of EECS and Prof. Catherine Hausman of Public Policy are heading a new project to explore the social costs and benefits of battery energy storage on the electrical grid.
Harnessing heat flow at the nanoscale while suppressing thermal radiation from the LED enables a new approach to light-based cooling.
The post Running an LED in reverse could cool future computers appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
PhD student Brandon Russell is awarded the Rackham International Student Fellowship for his research on magnetic fields in high-energy plasmas, which could help advance the development of clean energy and our understanding of energetic astrophysical phenomena.
“What I’m doing is trying to come up with ideas to let the agent continue learning different skills across its life.”