SilkLab - Tufts University

SilkLab - Tufts University Silk ,future of materials, form and function. Such proteins are polymorphic which allows controlling the end material format through their self-assembly.

LIVING MATERIALS
Materials at the Interface Between Technology and Life Sciences

Structural proteins are Nature’s building blocks, conferring stiffness, structure, and function to ordinarily soft biological materials. These biomaterials provide a unique opportunity by being simultaneously “technological” (e.g. mechanically robust, micro- and nanostructured, high-performing) and “biological” (e.g.

living, adaptable, bio-functional) making them ideally suited for applications at the interface between these two domains. Our goal is to provide innovation for new advanced material processing and manufacturing based on sustainable carbon-neutral technologies, and imagine a new class of applications for living materials that operate seamlessly at the interface between the biological and the technological worlds.

Thanksgiving is coming! We are ready! Silklab
11/21/2016

Thanksgiving is coming! We are ready! Silklab

10/25/2016
10/21/2016
10/20/2016
10/20/2016
10/19/2016

http://www.ted.com Fiorenzo Omenetto shares 20+ astonishing new uses for silk, one of nature's most elegant materials -- in transmitting light, improving sus...

10/19/2016

Structural proteins are Nature’s building blocks, conferring stiffness, structure, and function to ordinarily soft biological materials. Such proteins are polymorphic which allows controlling the end material format through their self-assembly. These biomaterials provide a unique opportunity by bei...

10/19/2016
LIVING MATERIALSMaterials at the Interface Between Technology and Life SciencesStructural proteins are Nature’s building...
10/19/2016

LIVING MATERIALS
Materials at the Interface Between Technology and Life Sciences

Structural proteins are Nature’s building blocks, conferring stiffness, structure, and function to ordinarily soft biological materials. Such proteins are polymorphic which allows controlling the end material format through their self-assembly. These biomaterials provide a unique opportunity by being simultaneously “technological” (e.g. mechanically robust, micro- and nanostructured, high-performing) and “biological” (e.g. living, adaptable, bio-functional) making them ideally suited for applications at the interface between these two domains.

Our goal is to provide innovation for new advanced material processing and manufacturing based on sustainable carbon-neutral technologies, and imagine a new class of applications for living materials that operate seamlessly at the interface between the biological and the technological worlds.

Address

Tufts University, 200 Boston Avenue
Medford, MA
02155

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