Research Triangle Soft Matter Group

Research Triangle Soft Matter Group

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Research Triangle Soft Matter Group, College & University, 101 Science Drive, Durham, NC.

The Triangle Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC), launched in September 2011, is a national resource for materials science and engineering research and education located in the Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill area of North Carolina. The MRSEC research team encompasses faculty and students at Duke University, North Carolina State University, North Carolina Central University and th

01/29/2020

Is anybody from this group going to the Biophysical Society in Feb? I'd love to invite you to BWF sponsored dinner! Send Kelly Rose a message so I can add you to the list!

Graduate Diversity Enrichment Program | Burroughs Wellcome Fund 06/17/2019

Are you a grad student from a UR group looking for extra funds to support your professional development? There is still time to apply! Deadline July 2!

Graduate Diversity Enrichment Program | Burroughs Wellcome Fund About the Award The Graduate Diversity Enrichment Program (GDEP) provides $5,000 over two years to support underrepresented Ph.D. candidates enrolled in a North Carolina university and conducting biomedical research. The opportunity is designed to provide enrichment support for student success. Deta...

02/12/2019

Graduate Networking event at Duke! RSVP by March 7th!

The Future is Plastics at Duke Chemistry 11/26/2018

Also check out the MONET website at: https://monet.duke.edu/

The Future is Plastics at Duke Chemistry The future is indeed plastics. Duke chemistry professor Stephen Craig has been named the leader of a $1.8 million, three-year center funded by the National Science Foundation to take polymer chemistry into a new age of precision. The Center for the Chemistry of Molecularly Optimized Networks (MONET)...

Biomaterials with 'Frankenstein proteins' help heal tissue 10/22/2018

Biomaterials with 'Frankenstein proteins' help heal tissue Biomedical engineers from Duke University and Washington University in St. Louis have demonstrated that, by injecting an elastic biomaterial made from ordered and disordered proteins, a scaffold can form that responds to temperature and easily integrates into tissue.

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101 Science Drive
Durham, NC
27708