Research news

Towards more energy-efficient 2D semiconductor devices
SUTD researchers show how a newly discovered family of two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors are more energy-efficient thanks to the presence of a built-in atomic protection layer.


Bluetooth devices proven to be vulnerable to unfixable security vulnerabilities
From having your audio interrupted to your data being wiped out, researchers highlight the security limitation of Bluetooth technology implementations.


SUTD researchers develop liquid metal antenna that can conform to soft biological tissues
Direct-ink-writing-based 3D printing of microchannels on a 7 μm-thick elastomeric substrate was demonstrated to fabricate liquid metal microfluidic antennas with unprecedented deformability and tissue-adhesion.


SUTD researchers developed new modelling toolkit to predict new-type-of-memory current
Efficient and accurate device modeling – may be one step closer to being solved, based on a new technique developed by SUTD.


Catering to the various appetites of technology adoption in Singapore’s food centres


Transforming the world with 3D printed electronics
Written by leading experts and researchers from SUTD and NTU, ‘3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing of Electronics: Principles and Applications’ is designed to be a one-stop guide for anyone interested in the 3D printing of electronics.


A universal approach to tailoring soft robots
An integrated design optimisation and fabrication workflow opens new opportunities for tailoring the mechanical properties of soft machines.


Rethinking Southeast Asia’s Energy Plans
Scientists in Singapore are calling for revisions in planned hydropower expansions in light of the rapidly decreasing cost of solar photovoltaic systems.


Ultra-strong squeezing of light demonstrated for ultrafast optical signal processing
Photonics researchers demonstrate 11-fold compression of light in time, introducing an important paradigm for light generation in advanced metrology, imaging and high speed optical communications.

SUTD researchers use nanoscale 3D printing to create high-resolution light field prints
SUTD researchers have used nanotechnology to create a unique print that displays a glasses-free 3D image under ordinary white light. The appearance of the image changes as the print is viewed from varying angles.