Honda unveiled a hydrogen fuel-cell concept big-rig, Hyundai announced the latest evolution of its fuel-cell-powered Xcient ...
Honey is already a pretty thick liquid, but let it begin to crystalize and it can become downright clumpy. The sugar crystals in suspension seem to increase its viscosity. This phenomenon occurs ...
Scientists have developed HydroSpread, a novel technique for building soft robots on water, with wide-ranging possibilities in robotics, healthcare, and environmental monitoring. Picture a miniature ...
Project Heaven brought together several important names in European aerospace, including DLR, Pipistrel Vertical Solutions, Air Liquide Advanced Technologies (a cryogenic tank developer), and H2Fly, a ...
Engineers have developed a new way to 3D-print liquid and solid materials together, potentially leading to more dynamic and useful products -- from robots to wearable electronic devices. Imagine a ...
The Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute’s certification program now allows design engineers to verify the software outputs of certified liquid-to-liquid heat exchanger performance ...
Chemical engineers at the University of Pennsylvania say they have developed a prototype fuel cell that’s the first to run on a readily available liquid fuel source, in this case ordinary diesel fuel.
Picture a robot controlled by micromotors so small and light that it suspends itself over water like a bug. With engineers at the University of Virginia, that’s now an achievable reality.
The discovery that football players were unknowingly acquiring permanent brain damage as they racked up head hits throughout their professional careers created a rush to design better head protection.
Zap Energy has advanced its Century fusion engineering test platform to operate for more than one hundred plasma shots at 0.2 Hz, or one shot every five seconds, with the resulting heat captured by ...
AI has redrawn the thermal and electrical map of data center infrastructure. But when liquid and power mix, safety is not ...