This senior Civil Engineering major hopes her work will lead to the implementation of more natural methods to protect its shores, including planting marsh grass.
Fuels Without Fossils
Two chemical engineers at the University of Delaware are developing new, better ways to produce fuels from sunlight.
New Insights Into the Adolescent Brain
The inner workings of the teenage brain are now slightly less mysterious, thanks to a research team led by University of Delaware engineers.
Student Research Spotlight: Vehicle to Grid Technology
Undergraduate electrical engineering students Samuel Matylewicz and Jenny Defriece are working on vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology, a pioneering transportation technology developed at UD.
UD Hosts Mesoscopic Methods Conference
The 15th International Conference for Mesoscopic Methods in Engineering and Science (ICMMES 2018) was held at the University of Delaware.
Which Drone Should You Trust?
A team of mechanical engineers developed a method to quantify the decision-making accuracy of autonomous robotic drones within a network.
Examining Microbes Under a New Lens
A team of researchers from the University of Delaware have uncovered that about 40 percent of Chesapeake Bay bacteria utilize sunlight as a source of supplemental energy.
Salivary Gland Study Wins Best Poster Award at GRS
Materials science and engineering doctoral students Eric Fowler and Anitha Ravikrishnan received the Best Poster Award at the Gordon Research Seminar on Multi-Scale Adhesion Mechanics and Signaling
Science At The Surface
Anderson Janotti, an assistant professor in materials science and engineering, models the surfaces of advanced electronic materials.
Shining a Light On Gene Regulation
A team of biomedical engineers is laying the groundwork for a method to inhibit cancer-promoting genes in cancer cells while leaving healthy cells intact.
Achieving A Balance of Power
A UD research team solved the 6 degree-of-freedom segmental power imbalance in human movement, an important mathematical discrepancy in biomechanics.
New Process Turns Wood Scraps Into Tape
A team of engineers at the University of Delaware has developed a novel process to make tape out of a major component of trees and plants called lignin—a substance paper manufacturers typically discard.














