Georgia Tech experts are at the forefront of technology and research that could revamp clean energy infrastructure in our state.
Two new research centers, representing an investment of about $65.7 million, have been awarded to Georgia Tech through the SRC-administrated Joint University Microelectronics Program 2.0, or JUMP 2.0.
Annual research spending enables medical breakthroughs, space exploration, and scientific innovation across multiple disciplines
The company is ramping up production on anode technology Yushin developed at Georgia Tech.
Chemists and engineers collaborate on process that washes away nonconductive side chains from a robust polymer backbone to create a powerful conductive plastic.
Individual robots can work collectively as swarms to create major advances in everything from construction to surveillance, but microrobots’ small scale is ideal for drug delivery, disease diagnosis, and even surgeries.
Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have found a detection method that could revolutionize cancer treatment by showing how cancers metastasize and what stage they are.