Latest News from: Penn State Materials Research Institute

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Newswise: Grant to help Penn State build semiconductor workforce in Pennsylvania
Released: 13-Aug-2024 10:05 AM EDT
Grant to help Penn State build semiconductor workforce in Pennsylvania
Penn State Materials Research Institute

The Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) has awarded $600,000 to Penn State’s Silicon Carbide Innovation Alliance (SCIA) to develop a series of educational courses, workshops, and paid academic and industrial internships focused on workforce development in Pennsylvania for the growing semiconductor industry.

Newswise: Atoms in advanced alloys find preferred neighbors when solidifying
Released: 8-Aug-2024 11:05 AM EDT
Atoms in advanced alloys find preferred neighbors when solidifying
Penn State Materials Research Institute

A discovery that uncovered the surprising way atoms arrange themselves and find their preferred neighbors in multi-principal element alloys (MPEA) could enable engineers to “tune” these unique and useful materials for enhanced performance in specific applications ranging from advanced power plants to aerospace technologies, according to the researchers who made the finding.

Newswise: Advanced Materials Research Poised to Revolutionize Technology and Society
Released: 7-Aug-2024 11:05 AM EDT
Advanced Materials Research Poised to Revolutionize Technology and Society
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Transition metal carbides (TMCs) and transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are emerging as key players with transformative potential across various industries.

Newswise: ‘Better than graphene’ material development may improve implantable technology
Released: 22-May-2024 2:05 PM EDT
‘Better than graphene’ material development may improve implantable technology
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Move over, graphene. There’s a new, improved two-dimensional material in the lab. Borophene, the atomically thin version of boron first synthesized in 2015, is more conductive, thinner, lighter, stronger and more flexible than graphene, the 2D version of carbon. Now, researchers at Penn State have made the material potentially more useful by imparting chirality — or handedness — on it, which could make for advanced sensors and implantable medical devices.

Newswise: ‘Surprising’ hidden activity of semiconductor material spotted by researchers
Released: 2-May-2024 5:05 PM EDT
‘Surprising’ hidden activity of semiconductor material spotted by researchers
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Using advanced imaging techniques, an international team led by Penn State researchers found that the material that a semiconductor chip device is built on, called the substrate, responds to changes in electricity much like the semiconductor on top of it.

Newswise: Combining novel biomaterial and microsurgery might enable faster tissue recovery
Released: 25-Mar-2024 10:05 AM EDT
Combining novel biomaterial and microsurgery might enable faster tissue recovery
Penn State Materials Research Institute

For soft tissue to recover and regrow, it needs blood vessels to grow to deliver oxygen and nutrients. Sluggish vascularization, however, can slow or even prevent recovery and regrowth of lost or damaged soft tissue after a severe injury or serious illness such as cancer.

Newswise: Backyard insect inspires invisibility devices, next gen tech
Released: 18-Mar-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Backyard insect inspires invisibility devices, next gen tech
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Leafhoppers, a common backyard insect, secrete and coat themselves in tiny mysterious particles that could provide both the inspiration and the instructions for next-generation technology, according to a new study led by Penn State researchers.

Newswise: Integrating dimensions to get more out of Moore’s Law and advance electronics
Released: 11-Jan-2024 1:05 PM EST
Integrating dimensions to get more out of Moore’s Law and advance electronics
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Today's most advanced chips house nearly 50 billion transistors within a space no larger than your thumbnail. The task of cramming even more transistors into that confined area has become more and more difficult, according to Penn State researchers.

Newswise: Materials Research Institute names 2023 Roy Award winners
Released: 11-Dec-2023 10:05 AM EST
Materials Research Institute names 2023 Roy Award winners
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Six Penn State materials researchers have received the 2023 Rustum and Della Roy Innovation in Materials Research Award, covering a wide range of research with societal impact.

Newswise: NIH diversity grant to fund student’s 3D bioprinting research
Released: 7-Dec-2023 12:05 PM EST
NIH diversity grant to fund student’s 3D bioprinting research
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Bioprinted, lab-grown networks of blood vessels in tissue could advance research on a variety of vascular diseases that affect millions of people worldwide, according to Angie Castro, a doctoral student pursuing a degree in chemical engineering at Penn State.

Newswise: Tiny bubbles could reveal immune cell secrets and improve treatments
Released: 7-Dec-2023 12:05 PM EST
Tiny bubbles could reveal immune cell secrets and improve treatments
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Realizing the full potential of macrophage therapies relies on being able to see what these cellular allies are doing inside our bodies, and a team of Penn State researchers may have developed a way to watch them do their thing.

Newswise: Can AI crave a favorite food?
Released: 7-Dec-2023 12:05 PM EST
Can AI crave a favorite food?
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Can artificial intelligence (AI) get hungry? Develop a taste for certain foods? Not yet, but a team of Penn State researchers is developing a novel electronic tongue that mimics how taste influences what we eat based on both needs and wants, providing a possible blueprint for AI that processes information more like a human being.

Newswise: Thicker, denser, better: New electrodes may hold key to advanced batteries
Released: 28-Aug-2023 4:35 PM EDT
Thicker, denser, better: New electrodes may hold key to advanced batteries
Penn State Materials Research Institute

To improve battery performance and production, Penn State researchers and collaborators have developed a new fabrication approach that could make for more efficient batteries that maintain energy and power levels.

Newswise: Mussels inspire an eco-friendly way to extract critical rare earth elements
Released: 11-Aug-2023 9:00 AM EDT
Mussels inspire an eco-friendly way to extract critical rare earth elements
Penn State Materials Research Institute

For clean, environmentally friendly rare earth element extraction, Penn State researchers found inspiration under the sea: mussel stickiness.

Newswise:Video Embedded zentropy-and-the-art-of-creating-new-ferroelectric-materials
VIDEO
Released: 11-Aug-2023 9:00 AM EDT
Zentropy and the art of creating new ferroelectric materials
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Systems in the Universe trend toward disorder, with only applied energy keeping the chaos at bay. The concept is called entropy, and examples can be found everywhere: ice melting, campfire burning, water boiling. Zentropy theory, however, adds another level to the mix.

Newswise: Mirror, mirror, who is the most efficient semiconductor of them all?
Released: 9-Aug-2023 1:05 PM EDT
Mirror, mirror, who is the most efficient semiconductor of them all?
Penn State Materials Research Institute

The next generation of 2D semiconductor materials doesn’t like what it sees when it looks in the mirror. Penn State researchers may have solved this issue.

Newswise: New ferroelectric material could give robots muscles
Released: 5-Jul-2023 8:05 AM EDT
New ferroelectric material could give robots muscles
Penn State Materials Research Institute

New ferroelectric material could give robots muscles actuation of ferroelectric polymers driven by Joule heating.

Newswise: Newborn baby inspires sensor design that simulates human touch
Released: 28-Jun-2023 8:05 AM EDT
Newborn baby inspires sensor design that simulates human touch
Penn State Materials Research Institute

As we move into a world where human-machine interactions are becoming more prominent, pressure sensors that are able to analyze and simulate human touch are likely to grow in demand. One challenge facing engineers is the difficulty in making the kind of cost-effective, highly sensitive sensor necessary for applications such as detecting subtle pulses, operating robotic limbs, and creating ultrahigh-resolution scales. However, a team of researchers has developed a sensor capable of performing all of those tasks.

Newswise: Newly acquired 3D printer boosts Penn State’s advanced ceramic research
Released: 27-Jun-2023 10:40 AM EDT
Newly acquired 3D printer boosts Penn State’s advanced ceramic research
Penn State Materials Research Institute

A recently installed 3D ceramics printer offers Penn State materials researchers advanced capabilities to easily produce high-resolution ceramic parts and other innovative ceramics for cutting-edge materials research at a lower cost than sourcing them.

Newswise: Penn State and onsemi partner to boost silicon carbide research in the U.S.
Released: 22-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Penn State and onsemi partner to boost silicon carbide research in the U.S.
Penn State Materials Research Institute

Penn State and onsemi, a leader in intelligent power and sensing technologies, have announced the signing of a memorandum of understanding toward an $8 million strategic collaboration that includes the establishment of the onsemi Silicon Carbide Crystal Center (SiC3) at Penn State’s Materials Research Institute. Over the next 10 years, onsemi will fund SiC3 with $800,000 per year.



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