Under the microscope, graphene-covered silicon wells show up as dots of different colours. Researchers think they may use the effect in energy-efficient displays.
Páramos are the almost literal lifeblood of many regions in Central and South America and they’re currently under attack. This is why TU Delft PhD graduate Veronica Graciela Minaya Maldonado decided to focus on one of them for her doctoral thesis.
Edison’s 1901 iron and nickel battery produced hydrogen when it was full. Professor Fokko Mulder saw this shortcoming as a benefit and reintroduced the NiFe battery as the ‘battolyser’.
After almost a week of travel, Dr. Jian Rong Gao is back at the Faculty of Applied Sciences (TNW). Meanwhile, his terahertz sensors are duly scanning the sky over Antarctica.
Deception at TU’s Astrodynamics & Space Missions section. ESA decided not to send a satellite to asteroid Didymos to test the cannonball technique to deflect asteroids hurtling toward Earth. Delft researchers were involved in this mission.
How can a gust generator help to improve the safety of flights and mitigate climate change? Researchers experimenting with the one at the Open Jet Facility (OJF) to recreate turbulence explained how their work will contribute to achieving this goal.
Everyone’s talking about autonomous cars, but what about robot boats? Delft researchers demonstrated their first prototype in a lab tank.
Imagine you’re at a concert on a majestic island. Suddenly, an earthquake shakes the ground beneath your feet. What would you do?
Coastlines could experience changes in sea level of over 1.8 metres by the end of 21st century, or so Delft climate researchers believe. In two recent publications they shed new light on Antarctica’s role in climate change.