News: Harry L. Tuller

High-temperature devices made from films that bend as they “breathe”

Carrying out maintenance tasks inside a nuclear plant puts severe strains on equipment, due to extreme temperatures that are hard for components to endure without degrading. Now, researchers at MIT and elsewhere have come up with a radically new way to make actuators that could be used in such…  

Professor Harry Tuller Promoted to Senior Member of IEEE

On behalf of the DMSE community, a huge congratulations to Professor Harry L. Tuller who was recently elevated to Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)! IEEE has said that "Senior Member is the highest professional…  

ACerS Award

Prof. Harry Tuller has been elected Distinguished Life Member of the American Ceramic Society. This distinction is the Society’s most prestigious level of membership and is awarded in recognition of a member’s contribution to the ceramics profession. The Constitution of the…  

Fostering U.S.-Russia energy innovation

Skoltech Center for Electrochemical Energy Storage brings together researchers from MIT and two Russian institutes to develop advanced batteries and fuel cells.  

MIT researchers receive Somiya Award

Professor Harry Tuller and Profesor Bilge Yildiz (NSE) will receive the Somiya Award from the International Union of Materials Research Societies. They are recognized for their work on "Design of ionic and mixed conducting ceramics for fuel cell application." The award will be presented in…  

Prof. Tuller honored by ECS

Prof. Harry Tuller received the Electrochemical Society’s High Temperature Materials Division Outstanding Achievement Award, which recognizes excellence in high temperature materials research and outstanding technical contributions to the  field of high temperature materials science. The award…  

Prof. Tuller spoke at the University of Oslo

In September, Prof. Harry Tuller spoke at FERMiO, Functional Energy Related Materials at the University of Oslo. His topic was "Current developments at MIT within nano-ionics and mixed conducting cathodes".
FERMiO is a five-year center, under the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences…