Engineering metals from the inside out: building stronger materials through microscopic chaos
To the naked eye, a piece of metal is just a piece of metal. But researchers like Tim Rupert, a professor of materials science and the Director of Hopkins Extreme Materials Institute, are working…
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Engineering metals from the inside out: building stronger materials through microscopic chaos
CategoriesTo the naked eye, a piece of metal is just a piece of metal. But researchers like Tim Rupert, a professor of materials science and the Director of Hopkins Extreme Materials Institute, are working…
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Proposed convening of materials science leaders receives 2026 Johns Hopkins Nexus Award funding
CategoriesA team led by MatSci Department Head Michael Kessler is planning to convene the University Materials Council to discuss the future of materials science research and education. The University Materials Council is made up of roughly 150 department heads, chairs, directors, and leaders…
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Materials science undergraduate Mareham Yacoub has been named the 2026 National Leader of the Year for Service to Campus and Community by Omicron Delta Kappa (OΔK), a national collegiate leadership honor society. The Omicron Delta Kappa recognizes…
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Baltimore students of all ages came to the Homewood campus last month to be wowed by materials science. At a series of booths outside Levering Hall, they made slime, played with hydrogels, built…
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Doctors insert more than 2 million tiny wire mesh tubes, or heart stents, into Americans’ blood vessels a year to treat heart disease, according to health care market research firm iData Research. Stents are one of many implants…
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Decoding the blood-brain barrier
CategoriesSeemingly unrelated diseases and conditions like Alzheimer's disease, obesity, chronic pain, traumatic brain injury, and multiple sclerosis disrupt the blood-brain barrier. Peter Searson's lab is developing tissue-engineered models to figure out why—and fix it.