Charged up
About:Energy stakes its claim as a leading battery data company
Rapidly growing Imperial startup About:Energy has raised £1.5m to commercialise its battery design software platform, The Voltt.
About:Energy stakes its claim as a leading battery data company
Rapidly growing Imperial startup About:Energy has raised £1.5m to commercialise its battery design software platform, The Voltt.
New EU Ambassador visits Imperial
The new EU Ambassador visited the College last week to see how Imperial researchers work with European partners to address shared challenges.
Printed material that behaves like bone promises better joint replacements
Imperial startup OSSTEC has raised £1.2 million to take its system of smart bone implants into clinical trials.
Boost to battery research as Faraday Institution announces £29m investment
The UK’s flagship battery research programme has announced a further £29m investment in key battery research projects.
£1.6 million funding to accelerate alternative fuel and batteries research
The three-year project will significantly accelerate the discovery and optimisation of sustainable, high-performance batteries and electro-fuels.
Prioritise tackling toxic emissions from tyres, urge Imperial experts
Imperial experts are calling for more to be done to limit the potentially harmful impact of toxic tyre particles on health and the environment.
4
Battery ageing models will help stretch the green benefits of electric vehicles
A battery modelling project led by Imperial startup About:Energy promises to lower the ownership cost and carbon footprint of electric vehicles.
Innovative viscosity meter opens the way for smarter use of fuel oil at sea
A viscosity meter developed in a Knowledge Transfer Partnership between Imperial and Rivertrace will help make shipping cleaner and more efficient.
Imperial nuclear Director gives expert evidence to parliament
Dr Michael Bluck, Director of the Centre for Nuclear Engineering, appeared in front of the Welsh Affairs Select Committee last week.
New flexible, steerable device placed in live brains by minimally invasive robot
Imperial College London scientists have successfully placed a bioinspired steerable catheter into the brain of an animal for the first time.
1