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Results 911 - 920 of 4904 for Metal working
  • News - 8 Mar 2006
    Highways of tomorrow might be filled with lighter, cleaner and more fuel-efficient automobiles made in part from recycled plastics, lignin from wood pulp and cellulose. First, however, researchers...
  • News - 31 Jan 2006
    Using state-of-the-art lab techniques and powerful computer simulations, Johns Hopkins researchers have discovered how atoms pack themselves in unusual materials known as metallic glasses. Their...
  • News - 17 Jan 2006
    As part of the Department of Energy-funded FreedomCAR program, Sandia National Laboratories' Power Sources Technology Group is researching ways to make lithium-ion batteries work longer and safer....
  • News - 16 Dec 2005
    A pioneering manufacturing process that can turn titanium, stainless steel and many other metals into a new breed of engineering components could have a big impact across industry. Unlike...
  • News - 18 Nov 2005
    Using building blocks that make up ordinary plastics, but putting them together in a whole new way, University of Michigan researchers have created a class of lightweight, rigid polymers they predict...
  • News - 2 Nov 2005
    The Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) at the University of North Dakota (UND) announced today major achievements in the development of a zero-emission coal-fired power plant. The EERC...
  • News - 28 Jun 2005
    MIT scientists have brought a supercool end to a heated race among physicists: They have become the first to create a new type of matter, a gas of atoms that shows high-temperature superfluidity....
  • News - 26 May 2005
    A new report by CSIRO and University of Sydney has opened up the full production chain for Australian industries to reveal that some industries, like mining, are more sustainable than generally...
  • News - 5 May 2005
    Australian manufacturers can increase car part exports and save millions of dollars by implementing a new system to identify flawed car parts. Developed by Swinburne University PhD student Suresh...
  • News - 22 Mar 2005
    Materials scientists and engineers at Northwestern University are developing a new "high-security" steel that would be resistant to bomb blasts such as the one that struck -- and nearly sank...

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