Most people would agree that children are the key to the future. They are the future leaders, scientists, teachers and caretakers of the planet. But instead of dictating what they should learn, could it be that involving them in the process to modernize education will result in better education?

A student team from TU Delft has produced a bicycle with a special 3D metal printer from the MX3D company in Amsterdam. “This technology enables us to use more organic forms.”

Dr. Hairen Tan has left TU Delft for the University of Toronto with a Rubicon grant. There he improves the stability of cheap and promising solar cells made of synthetic metal-organic materials, called perovskites.

The Forze racing team is testing its hydrogen-fueled racing car. Next August, they want to face the petrol-guzzling cousins. And beat them. Silently and emssion-free.

Where exactly are hormones active in our brain and which genes are involved? Delft researchers and colleagues from Leiden University Medical Center developed a technique that should lead to new insights quickly.

Quantum is big. There is increasing excitement about research into quantum devices and the world of possibilities they provide. However one question which has remained unanswered is how to effectively communicate quantum information between these different kinds of devices.