Archive

410 results

09 November 2023

Profile of a Safety and Security Researcher: Riccardo Ferrari

Profile of a Safety and Security Researcher: Riccardo Ferrari

08 July 2019

Programmable soft actuators show the great potential of soft robotics

Programmable soft actuators show the great potential of soft robotics

Researchers at TU Delft have developed highly programmable actuators that, similar to the human hand, combine soft and hard materials to perform complex movements.

08 June 2023

Pupils from VMBO 1 are introduced to professions at faculty 3mE

Pupils from VMBO 1 are introduced to professions at faculty 3mE

The 3mE faculty provided a short internship for pupils from the first class of VMBO (pre-vocational secondary education) SC Delfland from Delft. The introduction on what a university is and the importance of technology and education & research for Delft and society was followed by four introductions to professions at 3mE.

25 November 2020

RELEASE for Reversible Large-scale Energy Storage research is now up and running!

RELEASE for Reversible Large-scale Energy Storage research is now up and running!

On October 22, the RELEASE (Reversible Large-scale Energy Storage) project held an online kick-off meeting with 74 attendees to announce its official launch on October 1st.

14 February 2023

Rapid change of friction causes tactile ultrasound illusion

Rapid change of friction causes tactile ultrasound illusion

Michaël Wiertlewski, Assistant Professor at the Cognitive Robotics Department, and his colleagues have created a glass plate that can quickly change its friction. It does this with an actuator that releases waves of ultrasound to vibrate the plate. Their research is published in the ‘Royal Society Interface journal’.

14 July 2020

Recycling ammonia from animal manure is a good idea

Recycling ammonia from animal manure is a good idea

Mahinder Ramdin has been granted 50,000 euros from NWO’s ‘Idea Generator’ programme for his out-of-the-box research idea ‘Recycling of ammonia from animal manure’.

06 October 2023

Reducing motion sickness crucial to acceptance of self-driving cars

Reducing motion sickness crucial to acceptance of self-driving cars

04 July 2022

Rene Pecnik appointed Professor of Thermal and Fluids Engineering

Rene Pecnik appointed Professor of Thermal and Fluids Engineering

Rene Pecnik has been appointed Professor of Thermal and Fluids Engineering at the Process & Energy Department of the 3mE Faculty. Pecnik has a background in both fundamental research - specifically numerical analysis, fluid mechanics and turbulence - and applied research, having worked closely with companies specialised in gas turbine technology.

30 November 2022

Research from TU Delft in the Rijksmuseum

Research from TU Delft in the Rijksmuseum

A smart alternative to the traditional sandbag and an experiment with clay to learn more about strengthening dikes. These are two examples of TU Delft research that is currently being exhibited as art at the Rijksmuseum.

10 August 2023

Research on drop-outs and transfer students at 3mE and CEG

Research on drop-outs and transfer students at 3mE and CEG

The 3mE faculty and CEG faculty of TU Delft and The Hague University of Applied Sciences are conducting research to place and retain students in the most appropriate programmes as quickly as possible. For this purpose, they have received an AC grant from the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science.

06 November 2019

Research programmes Soft Robotics and Botanic Sensor networks at 4TU event

Research programmes Soft Robotics and Botanic Sensor networks at 4TU event

16 January 2019

Research to improve welding process for manufacturing industries

Research to improve welding process for manufacturing industries

09 March 2020

Researchers at TU Delft develop first model to guide large-scale production of ultrathin graphene

Researchers at TU Delft develop first model to guide large-scale production of ultrathin graphene

Graphene is well-known for its remarkable electronic, mechanical and thermal properties, but industrial production of high-quality graphene is very challenging. A research team at Delft University of Technology has now developed a mathematical model that can be used to guide the large-scale production of these ultrathin layers of carbon. The findings were published this week in The Journal of Chemical Physics.

17 February 2021

Researchers clarify the microscopic origin of dissipation with graphene

Researchers clarify the microscopic origin of dissipation with graphene

Associate professor Farbod Alijani and PhD student Ata Keşkekler have provided supporting evidence for the existence of a nonlinear dissipation mechanism in mechanical systems.

16 June 2020

Researchers create a new class of rate-sensitive mechanical metamaterials

Researchers create a new class of rate-sensitive mechanical metamaterials

Researchers at the Department of Biomechanical Engineering of Delft University of Technology have created a new class of metamaterials that can dynamically switch their mechanical behaviour. It may form the basis for practical applications such as fall-protective clothing for the elderly. The results are to appear in the journal Science Advances on 17 June.

03 February 2022

Researchers shed light on role of kinetics in fluid transport

Researchers shed light on role of kinetics in fluid transport

Remco Hartkamp, Max Döpke en Fenna Westerbaan van der Meij, researchers at the department Process & Energy, are shedding new light on the role of surface reaction rates of liquid in electrokinetic transport.

02 September 2021

Results election of the best lecturer 2020-2021

Results election of the best lecturer 2020-2021

All students from the 3mE Faculty had the opportunity to vote for the best lecturer of the academic year 2020-2021. This award allows them show their appreciation for these lecturers’ unique and creative teaching styles.

26 June 2023

Review of the Maritime Engineering Design Day

Review of the Maritime Engineering Design Day

During the Design Day of the undergraduate Maritime Engineering program, all first-year students tested their self-designed ship model. The students were instructed to make the sailing condition and heavy load condition as optimal as possible.

21 May 2019

Richard Norte working on new generation of quantum accelerometers

Richard Norte working on new generation of quantum accelerometers

This month, Richard Norte, researcher at the Department of Precision and Microsystems Engineering, received an ATTRACT Grant worth 100,000 euros to develop a new generation of quantum accelerometers for interial navigation.

12 September 2022

Riender Happee appointed Professor in Motion Comfort in Automated Driving

Riender Happee appointed Professor in Motion Comfort in Automated Driving

Riender Happee has been appointed Professor in Motion Comfort in Automated Driving at the department of Cognitive Robotics, section Intelligent Vehicles. Happee’s research focuses on motion perception and motion comfort as key factors in the acceptance of vehicle automation.

22 November 2018

Robotic support improves rehabilitation

Robotic support improves rehabilitation

We are living longer and longer these days. And the older we get, the higher the chance of becoming afflicted with an age-related disease, such as stroke. As many as three million people have a stroke every year in Europe. There is a high probability (40%) that many of those who survive will not be able to walk by themselves, unassisted, after three weeks. At which point they will need rehabilitation. But if an increasing number of elderly people want to rehabilitate, then that’s going to put more and more pressure on therapists. Or will it? Probably not, according to Heike Vallery, professor of human motor augmentation at Delft University of Technology. She invented a robotic support system - the RYSEN™. - with a Swiss-Dutch consortium that is 3 metres wide and 10 metres long, which is fastened to the ceiling. RYSEN™ will be launched today by Motek.

26 April 2018

Royal Honours for Prof. Jenny Dankelman

26 April 2018

Royal honours for three TU Delft professors

TU Delft professors Isabel Arends, Jenny Dankelman and Andy van den Dobbelsteen each received a royal honour this year.

22 July 2019

Rubicon Grant for Davood Farhadi Machekposhti

Rubicon Grant for Davood Farhadi Machekposhti

16 researchers who have recently gained their PhDs have been awarded a Rubicon grant from NWO. At faculty 3mE, Davood Farhadi Machekposhti, researcher at the department of Precision and Microsystems Engineering, has been awarded.

05 October 2021

Rubicon grant for Sebastien Callens

Rubicon grant for Sebastien Callens

Sebastien Callens, (former) researcher at the Department of BioMechanical Engineering in the field of biomaterials and bone implants, has received a Rubicon grant for a research stay abroad. He will be conducting research on bone mineralisation at Imperial College London. Callens is one of the 24 researchers who has received this grant from NWO.

07 March 2023

Rudy Negenborn’s vision on autonomous ships in Nature

Rudy Negenborn’s vision on autonomous ships in Nature

Nature published an article ‘Autonomous ships are on the horizon: here’s what we need to know’ about autonomous ships that highlights research gaps in six key areas. Rudy Negenborn and his co-authors touch upon critical challenges in the development and deployment of autonomous ships in practice, that are not receiving sufficient attention in research and innovation.

27 February 2019

START-UP grant for microchip that tests new fundamental physics theories

START-UP grant for microchip that tests new fundamental physics theories

Richard Norte, expert in the area of micro- and nano-engineering and researcher at the Department of Precision and Microsystems Engineering is developing microchips that make it possible to explore the interplay between two famous quantum effects.

29 May 2019

Safety in OR remains a hot item

Safety in OR remains a hot item

Doctor and PhD student Frederique Meeuwsen from TU Delft spent two years researching the possible application of RFID technology to the research OR.

22 November 2022

Saskia van Heumen TU Delft Best Graduate 2022

Saskia van Heumen TU Delft Best Graduate 2022

Saskia van Heumen has been voted TU Delft’s Best Graduate 2022 for her outstanding research on the use of LED photoacoustics in treating Lymphoedema.

22 November 2022

Saskia van Heumen: TU Delft Best Graduate 2022

Saskia van Heumen: TU Delft Best Graduate 2022

Today, at the TU Delft Best Graduate Award Ceremony 2022, eight recently graduated engineers presented their research and results of their excellent master thesis. Ir. Saskia van Heumen, graduate of the Faculty of Mechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineering (3mE), received the prestigious title TU Delft Best Graduate 2022. For her graduation research, Saskia developed a method to accurately image lymphatic vessels in patients.

14 April 2020

Scientists design ventilator made of standard parts

Scientists design ventilator made of standard parts

Amir Zadpoor and a team of scientists from the BioMechanical Engineering department are testing the first prototypes of a ventilator that consists entirely of standard parts. These parts are available locally almost all over the world and can be produced by hundreds of manufacturers. This means that, in many cases, the ventilator can be assembled locally. It is hoped that the design will be able to respond to the demand for ventilators and offer a solution to the logistical problems resulting from a shortage of specific components.

28 February 2023

Sergio Grammatico has been awarded an NWO ENW-M1 grant

Sergio Grammatico has been awarded an NWO ENW-M1 grant

Sergio Grammatico, Associate Professor at the Delft Centre for Systems and Control (DCSC) has been awarded an individual NWO ENW-M1 grant of € 365.000 for his research project on wind farm control and optimization. NWO ENW-M grants are intended for curiosity-driven scientific research.

16 July 2018

Seven Veni’s for TU Delft researchers

Seven Veni’s for TU Delft researchers

NWO has announced the Veni recipients for 2018. Amongst them are seven scientists from Delft University of Technology.

01 February 2018

Signifant funding for smart & cheaper medical devices

Jenny Dankelman, full professor of minimally invasive surgery and interventional techniques, and Tim Horeman, assistant professor of sustainable surgery at the Department of BioMechanical Engineering, will receive significant funding from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research and the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (NWO/ZonMw) for their research initiative entitled ‘SMART Surgical system: High-quality medical devices making minimally invasive surgery applicable to low-resource settings’.

01 March 2021

Simulations to make insight into electrokinetic transport more reliable

Simulations to make insight into electrokinetic transport more reliable

Researcher Remco Hartkamp and PhD student Max Döpke of the Process & Energy Department have taken an important step in making simulation results for electrokinetic transport more reliable by using molecular simulations.

15 February 2018

Small droplets for better crystals

Sometimes it’s not just the chemical composition of a substance that matters but also the way in which the ingredients are ordered at the atomic level: the crystal structure. For example, the wrong crystal structure of one and the same material could mean the difference between an effective and a failed drug.

13 September 2018

Smart choice of materials crucial for future

11 April 2019

Smart motor in handlebars prevents bicycles from falling over

Smart motor in handlebars prevents bicycles from falling over

TU Delft and the bicycle manufacturer Koninklijke Gazelle have developed a prototype of a bike with smart steering assistance that may help to reduce the number of falls with bicycles.

23 September 2021

Smart optical and portable diagnostic system for schistosomiasis saves lives

Smart optical and portable diagnostic system for schistosomiasis saves lives

Temitope Agbana, PostDoc researcher at the Delft Center for Systems and Control department, together with a team of researchers, designed the Schistoscope; a smart method for early and easy detection of Bilharzia, a deadly tropical disease.

07 May 2020

Smart optics against smart parasites

Smart optics against smart parasites

This Wednesday May 6th, Tepitome ‘Tope’ Agbana successfully defended his PhD on ‘Smart Optics Against Smart Parasites’, at Delft University of Technology (3ME faculty). The defence took place at the Senate room of the Aula while four other committee members joined via Skype . Agbana’s research concerns the early detection of malaria, which is the leading cause of death among pregnant women and young children: 11% of maternal and 20% of under–five deaths are attributed to malaria every year.