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February 11, 2016
Researchers from Gogotsi’s Nanomaterials Group and Paul Sabatier University in France have reported a method for embedding a supercapacitor energy storage device in the silicon wafer of a microchip.
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February 11, 2016
After more than half a decade of speculation, fabrication, modeling and testing, an international team of researchers led by Drexel University’s Yury Gogotsi, PhD, and Patrice Simon, PhD, of Paul Sabatier University in Toulouse, France, have confirmed that their process for making carbon films and micro-supercapacitors will allow microchips and their power sources to become one and the same.
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February 10, 2016
Dean Joseph Hughes along with College of Engineering students and staff attended the PeaceTech Summit 2016 in Washington, D.C. The agenda of the Summit focused on exploring the new breed of social entrepreneurship that is harnessing the power of technology, media and data in violent conflict zones.
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February 09, 2016
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February 08, 2016
Yuriy and Sergey Smolin are both grateful to their parents for making them the industrious and motivated individuals they are today. When the twins were 5-years-old, the Smolin family fled Russia and came to America in search of a better life. Their father, a doctor, and their mother, a railroad engineer, left their professional positions and were forced to initially live on welfare until they could find work to support their four children.
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February 08, 2016
Drexel University’s College of Engineering is proud to announce the 2016 Engineering Leader of the Year, Philip L. Rinaldi, founding partner, Chairman and CEO of Philadelphia Energy Solutions (PES).
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February 04, 2016
Eli Fromm, Ph.D., long-serving ECE Professor, led the effort to become an approved program.
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February 04, 2016
A Drexel University materials scientist has discovered a way to grow a crystal ball in a lab. Not the kind that soothsayers use to predict the future, but a microscopic version that could be used to encapsulate medication in a way that would allow it to deliver its curative payload more effectively inside the body.
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February 03, 2016
Professor Christopher Li has discovered a method for growing crystals in a sphere shape, a development that could be used as a platform for drug delivery.
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February 03, 2016
A Drexel University materials scientist has discovered a way to grow a crystal ball in a lab. Not the kind that soothsayers use to predict the future, but a microscopic version that could be used to encapsulate medication in a way that would allow it to deliver its curative payload more effectively inside the body.
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