Symposium reveals potential for new partnerships.
New Weapon Against Breast Cancer
Light-triggered therapies work better together than separately against triple-negative breast cancer, UD research shows.
Examining 2D Materials, Atom by Atom
Engineers uncover strength, toughness of hexagonal boron nitride.
Light Wakes Up Freshwater Bacteria
Some of the bacteria that live in ponds, lakes and other freshwater environments grow faster during the day, even though they don’t take in sunlight as an energy source, according to research from UD.
Unlocking The Mystery of Catalysts
Exploration of metal oxides has potential to drive catalysis research to new heights Catalysis is, like many sciences, situational. This high-powered chemistry is all about accelerating chemical reactions, using catalysts to “turbocharge” the process and quickly...
Robots On The Farm
Engineers and plant scientists are teaming up to optimize corn growth.
The Secret Life of Batteries
This professor examines the properties of batteries so he can make them charge faster.
New Associate Dean
David C. Martin, the Karl and Renate Böer Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, is now the Associate Dean for Research and Entrepreneurship in the University of Delaware’s College of Engineering.
Delaware Gov. Carney Tours Biopharmaceutical Building Site
Delaware Gov. John Carney and a small group of officials visited the construction site of the University of Delaware’s Carol Ammon and Marie Pinizzotto M.D. Biopharmaceutical Innovation Center on Tuesday, Feb. 5.
Keeping Things Moving
UD researchers synthesize renewable oils for use in lubricants.
In Search of Weyl semimetals
UD engineers make materials that could enable better computer chips.
High Performance Computing
The University of Delaware’s newest high performance computing (HPC) community cluster, named Caviness, puts vast computational power at researchers’ disposal.














