Scientists develop a low-cost device to make cell therapy safer
A plastic microfluidic chip can remove some risky cells that could potentially become tumors before they are implanted in a patient.
A plastic microfluidic chip can remove some risky cells that could potentially become tumors before they are implanted in a patient.
Study finds chiral structures, with mirror-image configurations, can emerge from nonchiral systems, suggesting new ways to engineer these materials.
The one-step fabrication process rapidly produces miniature chemical reactors that could be used to detect diseases or analyze substances.
The findings point to faster way to detect bacteria in food, water, and clinical samples.
The new diagnostic, which is based on analysis of urine samples, could also be designed to reveal whether a tumor has metastasized.
With this microfluidic device, researchers modeled how sickled blood cells clog the spleen’s filters, leading to a potentially life-threatening condition.
This computational tool can generate an optimal design for a complex fluidic device such as a combustion engine or a hydraulic pump.
With NEET, Sherry Nyeo is discovering MIT’s undergraduate research community at the intersection of computer science and biological engineering.
MIT chemical engineers create affordable, sustainable soap-based system to eliminate emerging micropollutants in water.
Collaborative team wins prestigious NIH grant to investigate the physical forces that influence metastatic cancer.
Dana Al-Sulaiman, a recent postdoc with MIT’s Ibn Khaldun Fellowship for Saudi Arabian Women, has developed a cheap, minimally invasive diagnostic test for cancer.
Udayan Umapathi SM ’17 and Will Langford SM ’14, PhD ’19 are co-founders of a Media Lab spinoff building a full-stack platform to enable automation for genomics and genetic engineering.
The results may help engineers develop a way to inject drugs without needles.
Deterministic lateral displacement assay can rapidly assess host inflammatory response, identifying a potentially life-threatening hyper-aggressive immune response.
Miniaturized device activates drugs in a small region deep within the brain.