An illustration of a metal-free, water-based battery and regular lithium-ion batteries

Texas A&M researchers discovered a groundbreaking 1,000% increase in the storage capacity of water-based battery electrodes.

A man holding a certificate

Dr. Guillermo Aguilar was elected to the 2023 class of fellows for the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering.

Two smiling men

Drs. Daniel Selva and Nathan Tichenor are honored for their outstanding contributions to engineering and science through their work.

Banner that reads, Two engineering faculty receive 2023 Distinguished Achievement Awards; below are Robin Murphy’s headshot with Robin Murphy, Computer Science and Engineering listed underneath and Kristi Shryock’s headshot with Kristi Shryock, Multidisciplinary Engineering listed underneath

Dr. Robin Murphy and Dr. Kristi Shryock were recently honored with one of the most prestigious awards presented to faculty and staff at Texas A&M University.

A smiling man

Theodore Hughes, a mechanical engineer-in-training at Shah Smith & Associates, reflects on his undergraduate journey as an architectural engineering major.

Two people in white lab coats

The Master of Engineering degree prepares students with industry-relevant courses and internships and fosters translational research with faculty.

A man standing in a lab

Dr. Arum Han is leading a project funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop and implement a corrosion mitigation strategy by repurposing existing corrosion-causing microbes into a corrosion-resistant "living" coating.

A smiling man

Dr. Abdullah Muzahid is enhancing the field of computer learning by increasing the speed of computer training and reliability of computer decision-making through two research projects.

Two people in a lab, one looking in a microscope.

The Department of Biomedical Engineering works extensively with the Cardiovascular Pathology Lab to create safe medical devices.

Suchitaa Sawhney holds her $750 check from the Raymond Ideas Challenge with judges.

Suchitaa Sawhney, a junior biomedical engineering student, placed fifth in the Raymond Ideas Challenge for her development of Melasure, an app that scans the skin for melanomas.