Latest News Open menu Search rss Open menu 26 October 2023 DNA Origami nanoturbine sets new horizon for nanomotors Read more 23 October 2023 Kagome: promising quantum material to study superconductivity Quantum scientists from the Ali Lab at Delft University of Technology and their collaborators from the Max Plank Institute of Microstructure Physics, University of California Santa Barbara, and others, have found proximity–induced superconductivity with strong magnetic field direction dependence and a signal of edge supercurrent inside a Kagome metal. The study, published in Science Advances, shows the promising properties of Kagome metals to investigate unconventional superconductivity and Josephson devices. Read more 16 October 2023 New connections enable long-distance quantum networks Quantum scientists from Campinas University in Brazil and the Delft University of Technology have developed an optomechanical system that uses dissipative interactions to coherently convert between microwave mechanical excitations and optical signals. Read more 21 September 2023 TU Delft scientists put ChatGPT to the test Researchers at Delft University of Technology and RWTH Aachen University have put ChatGPT’s knowledge on science and engineering to the test. By letting 198 Delft scientists evaluate GPT-3.5’s answers to questions covering natural science and engineering disciplines at the university, they found out how well the large language model can answer university level questions. Read more 15 September 2023 TU Delft Reactor Institute in Focus broadcast on Nuclear Energy On Monday 11 September 2023, Focus aired a broadcast on nuclear energy in which EPZ, COVRA and TU Delft Reactor Institute were interviewed. Read more 05 September 2023 ERC Starting grant for CO2 recycling in chemical industry Converting large concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) into products for the chemical industry. That is what Tom Burdyny, recipient of an ERC Starting Grant, wants to achieve. The method that might make this possible is called electrolysis, which creates new chemical bonds by application of electricity. Read more 21 August 2023 5 million in quest for “missing link” in quantum communication Delft University of Technology and its Kavli Institute of Nanoscience received a five-million-dollar grant from The Kavli Foundation to fund a collaborative effort to develop the quantum equivalent of telecommunication. Read more 03 August 2023 Seventeen Veni grants for leading TU Delft researchers The Dutch Research Council (NOW) has awarded Veni funding of up to EUR 280,000 to 188 promising researchers from the full breadth of science. In the fields of Applied and Technical Sciences (TTW) and Exact and Natural Sciences (ENW), seventeen scientists from TU Delft have been honoured. This will allow the laureates to further develop their own research ideas over the next three years. Read more 25 July 2023 Going abroad: Rubicon grant for Aafke van Aalst PhD Candidate Aafke van Aalst has received a Rubicon grant from NWO, which enables her to gain research experience at a leading institute abroad for two years. The coveted grant was awarded to 15 young, highly promising researchers in total. Read more 20 July 2023 Living together: Microbial communities are more than the sum of their parts To engineer successful microbial communities, scientists need to predict whether microorganisms can live and work together. One popular predictive rule states that if a pair of microbes will coexist, they will also coexist in a bigger community of microbes. A study published in Science now found that this simple rule will not always work. Read more ... Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 You are on page 7 Page 8 Page 9 ... Stay connected linkedin twitter Share this page: Facebook Linkedin Twitter Email WhatsApp Share this page