Interesting Engineering on MSN
Scientists build molecular ‘toolbox’ for next-generation advanced electronics
Researchers from the Universities of Birmingham and Warwick, alongside the University of Vienna, have ...
A mechanical engineer at the UK’s Lancaster University, Lucy Rogers turned an accidental PhD into a career spanning Robot ...
Charleston's has a plan to help dry out the low-lying, historic downtown involves a sewage system originally built in the ...
Developing new chemicals and materials that are safe and sustainable from the very beginning - this is the aim of the EU-funded project »SSbD4CheM«. Together with 18 partners from 14 countries, the ...
Posters detail large gene insertion and epigenetic editing capabilities, expanding ElevateBio’s gene editing toolbox– Additional presentations ...
A new study published in Engineering provides mechanistic insights into live-cell glycocalyx engineering and supports the rational design of next-generation adoptive cell therapies (ACTs) against B ...
Mark Persons shares why a multimeter is his go-to instrument for initially figuring out what is going on or going wrong in a ...
The day is not far off when a simple blood test will mean that people with cancer will no longer have to undergo surgery to ...
At RAPID + TCT 2026, billed as the biggest additive manufacturing conference in North America, we spent many hours poking ...
As a specialist in drive and automation technology, Lenze offers application‑specific motion control solutions for the ...
Lando Norris and Justin Rose are both negotiating demanding circuits for Team McLaren in the Magic City this week.
Researchers from the Universities of Birmingham, Warwick, and Vienna have developed a molecular 'toolbox' enabling nanoribbon-based electronic materials to be built with atomic precision. The method ...
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