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Sun Catalytix Signs $4M ARPA-E Contract and Forms Scientific Advisory Board; Affordable Catalysts for Water Splitting

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The ability to convert electrical energy into hydrogen reducing equivalents is fundamental to an enormous number of processes. With technology based on patents developed right here at MIT by Daniel Nocera, Sun Catalytix now has the support it needs to bring breakthrough energy storage technologies to market more quickly.

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Former Berkeley Dean of Engineering David A. Hodges Dies at 85

Cars That Think

He helped develop MOS analog-to-digital converters, expanding the use of the technology to industries including communications, signal processing, environmental sensing, and semiconductors. He earned a master’s degree in aeronautics and astronautics in 1977 from MIT and a Ph.D. He retired as professor emeritus in 1998. for 37 years.

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