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IGP - International Graduate Program

Lkhamsuren Ganchimeg (Gana) from Mongolia 1st-year doctoral degree student in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, School of Materials and Chemical Technology Program: IGP (A), International Program for Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering (IPISE) Prior affiliation: National University Mongolia Why did you choose Tokyo Tech s IGP? I used to hear about Japanese universities being good at science and engineering before I came here. A lot of discoveries and technologies have been made in Japan. When I decided I wanted to study abroad, I started looking for universities especially in Japan. One great thing about Tokyo Tech was its official website. There was plenty of information on applying from overseas for someone with no background knowledge, and lots of details on the offered programs were available.

Materials breakthrough enables twistronics for bulk systems

Credits: Image courtesy of the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology. Previous image Next image Researchers from the Low Energy Electronic Systems (LEES) interdisciplinary research group at the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART), MIT’s research enterprise in Singapore, together with MIT and National University of Singapore (NUS), have discovered a new way to control light emission from materials. Controlling the properties of materials has been the driving force behind many modern technologies from solar panels to computers, smart vehicles, and lifesaving hospital equipment. But materials properties have traditionally been adjusted based on their composition, structure, and sometimes size, and most practical devices that produce or generate light use layers of materials of different compositions that can often be difficult to grow.

Researchers from across campus receive 2021 global health grants and awards

Researchers from across campus receive 2021 global health grants and awards
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Advanced Microscopy Reveals Twin Boundary Defect in Soft-Block Copolymer

Advanced Microscopy Reveals Twin Boundary Defect in Soft-Block Copolymer Written by AZoMMay 20 2021 Using a sophisticated electron microscopy technique, researchers from Texas A&M University have uncovered a single microscopic defect, known as a “twin” in a soft-block copolymer, for the first time. Edwin Thomas and his team have found a twin boundary defect in a soft polymer material having a double gyroid shape for the first time. Image Credit: Dharmesh Patel/Texas A&M Engineering. This microscopic defect could be manipulated in the days to come to produce materials that have unique photonic and acoustic characteristics. This defect is like a black swan something special going on that isn’t typical. Although we chose a certain polymer for our study, I think the twin defect will be fairly universal across a bunch of similar soft matter systems, like oils, surfactants, biological materials, and natural polymers. Therefore, our findings will be valuable to diverse research a

Research team develops new class of soft materials

 E-Mail I think you re on mute. This was the most-used phrase of 2020, according to Human Resources Online. Emblazoned on T-shirts and embossed on coffee-mugs, we used the meme to make fun of ourselves while learning video-conferencing tools like Zoom and Microsoft s Teams. But for the more than 7 million Americans who suffer from vocal disorders, not being heard is a serious matter. Many people who have normal speaking skills have great difficulty communicating when their voice box, the larynx, fails. This can occur if the vocal cords, the two bands of smooth muscle tissue in the larynx, suffer damage from an accident, surgical procedure, viral infection or cancer.

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