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Interesting Engineering

US firm to scale laser-based nuclear fusion ‘breakthrough’ with new partnership Military Archives - Interesting Engineering World’s first non-nuclear lead-cooled reactor to generate electricity begins installation US scientists devise new process to turn sewage sludge into 99% pure natural gas US firm unveils submarine-hunting drone with 9,200-mile-range, 35 mph top speed Military Archives - Interesting Engineering Supercomputer finds lithium-titanium tweak to boost sodium-ion batteries for grids Lockheed Martin demonstrates vertical launch missile system for mobile drone defense China’s 1116 MWe Taipingling Unit 1 reactor goes online, set to generate 9bn kWh yearly ChatGPT Images 2.0 update combines reasoning, research, and design with 2K output US Navy tests plug-and-play laser system on USS Bush carrier, downs drones at sea China’s CATL reveals 621-mile EV battery, under-7-minute charging to challenge BYD US uses world’s first exascale supercomputer to model supernovae, fusion reactors AI and Robotics Archives - Interesting Engineering First-in-human study confirms safety of graphene-based brain interface Tesla’s Optimus humanoid robot greets runners, poses for photos at Boston Marathon Interlocking materials offer high strength and flexibility for robotics, infrastructure US redeploys 100,000-ton nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in Red Sea after repairs US scientists unveil concept for ‘world’s first neutrino laser’ to unlock breakthroughs New military tech can maintain communication in contested electronic warfare environments Got a dark personality? Psychologists can help you choose your career wisely Humidity boosts performance of 3D-printed nanogenerator instead of degrading it China demonstrates microwave beam that recharges drones in flight, continues power delivery Scientists run compact free-electron laser for eight hours, cracks FEL stability problem China’s PLA considers to use minelaying underwater drones to enforce Taiwan blockade: Report 1-ton sharks may struggle for survival in waters exceeding 62.6°F, study suggests US firm’s thorium nuclear fuel bundles move to manufacturing for commercial reactors Tesla hits 0% charge in remote Chilean desert as YouTuber uses hood-mounted solar Humanoid robot surpasses human world record in Beijing half-marathon, clocking 50:26 mins New method extracts maximum work from unknown quantum states using symmetry tricks US scientists’ new method can measure rare-earth elements in plants without destroying them 1,800-year-old feces reveal disease and hygiene linked to Roman Empire in Bulgaria Tankers come under fire as Iranian forces close Strait of Hormuz over US blockade Iran announces opening of Strait of Hormuz, Donald Trump says blockade to continue US scientists confirm altermagnetism in rust, unlock faster, low-power electronics Chinese scientists hit record 63 K in nickel superconductors without extreme pressure Songbird study reveals potential paths for human brain’s self-repair, neurogenesis US dumping ground that stores hundreds of drums with nuclear waste set to be cleaned up Chinese scientists’ diamond-based coating to boost data center cooling efficiency by 80% US’ 100,000-ton nuclear warship sets record with longest deployment since Vietnam War World-first eVTOL two-way transition flight test completed by Vertical Aerospace New electrolyte design improves solid-state battery conductivity by 2.7 times 50-year-old prediction confirmed as scientists spot darkness moving faster than speed of light Uncrewed underwater vehicle enters service in Australia, can boost autonomous warfare power Quasi-solid-state battery hits 99.98% efficiency, stops dendrites, and boosts cycle life France plugs Lucy photonic quantum system into supercomputer for hybrid computing US Army CH-47F Chinook helicopter makes first autonomous landing without human input 300-million-year-old German Basin could hold one of Europe’s largest lithium resources ‘World’s first’: AGIBOT G2 humanoid robots run tablet testing on live factory line Google in talks with Pentagon to deploy Gemini AI after Claude limits dispute US tests spin-polarized fuel in 180-million-degree Fahrenheit tokamaks for fusion power US unveils AI-powered drone with 66-mile reach, modular payload transforms operations Anthropic launches Opus 4.7 with 13% higher vision resolution and stronger coding Germany airdrops 5 ton ‘mini tank’ from aircraft in first airborne test trial US nuclear firm submits plan for 240 MW small modular reactor to power 1.5 million homes China turns on largest AI science hub in 2 months, using no US chips at all Relic black holes from cosmic ‘bounce’ may be dark matter shaping our Universe China releases first detailed map locating seabed minerals in eastern seabed China’s humanoid robot masters real-time tennis rallying with 90.9% return accuracy 10,000 suns: Black hole ‘dancing jets’ clocked at instantaneous power in a first US chemists turn natural gas into liquid fuel without high heat and pressures Australia’s major refinery burns for 13 hours, raises fresh fears over petrol supply crisis US firm can help faster, real time tracking of high-speed threats with infrared camera US Army trials unmanned Hunter Wolf robot with gun, radar in combat drills Massive cosmic test shows Newton and Einstein still explain gravity accurately Mondelez-backed startup debuts ‘world’s first’ chocolate bars made with cultured cocoa China trials deep sea actuator for cutting cables and pipelines at 3,500m depth ‘Missing house’: Exact location of Shakespeare’s only London 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Roman Hispania reveal ingenious house painters A reimagined Paul trap could help labs worldwide study antimatter beyond CERN China’s BYD debuts electric SUV with up to 590-mile range capability, 130.15 kWh battery Rare 2,000-hp Japanese WWII aircraft lifted out of ocean 80 years after combat Autonomous underwater mine warfare could become easier with French firm’s AI-powered system China showcases Y-30 plane to outperform ‘world’s best tactical transport aircraft in service’ NASA Artemis II crew splashes down safely on Earth after 694,000-mile roundtrip to moon UK firm to boost US Army’s battle firepower with new cannons for 155mm Howitzer Can defects boost light? 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New heat-pressed silk material outperforms wood, rivals Kevlar and carbon fiber
Neetika Walt · 2026-05-20 · via Interesting Engineering

Researchers from Tufts University, Imperial College London, and the University of Michigan have developed a new way to turn natural silk into an ultra-strong solid material without dissolving the fibers or using synthetic additives. The resulting material rivals advanced composites in strength and toughness while remaining biocompatible and tunable for medical applications.

Instead of breaking silk down into proteins and rebuilding it, the team fused aligned silk fibers directly using controlled heat and pressure. The process preserves much of silk’s original molecular structure, allowing the final material to retain the natural strength of the fibers.

The researchers said the fused silk outperformed materials like bone and wood in tensile toughness and came close to Kevlar. It also showed higher ballistic impact resistance than some carbon fiber reinforced polymer composites.

“The process breaks down the natural fibers into the individual silk fibroin proteins before processing them into new shapes, so we lose a lot of the inherent strength of the original fibers,” said Chunmei Li, research assistant professor at Tufts School of Engineering.

“With this new method, there’s no need to dissolve the silk—we simply align the fibers and apply heat and pressure, and they fuse together in one step.”

Silk strength rebuilt

The material starts with commercially available silk moth cocoon fibers used in textile manufacturing. Researchers first removed sericin, the sticky coating around the fibers, using a mild sodium carbonate solution. The fibers were then aligned and hot-pressed under carefully controlled temperatures and pressures.

During heating, the more mobile parts of the silk protein structure softened enough to bond neighboring fibers together while preserving the crystalline regions responsible for strength and flexibility.

“The silk is like a composite,” said David Kaplan, Stern Family Endowed Professor of Engineering at Tufts. “There is a more mobile, amorphous phase of the fiber proteins, and there is the part of the protein chain that folds to form sheet-like surfaces that stack up into crystalline structures.”

Researchers found an optimal processing window between 257 and 419 degrees Fahrenheit and pressures ranging from 1,900 to 9,800 atmospheres. Too little heat or pressure created weaker structures, while excessive temperatures made the material brittle.

The final structure resembles wood at a microscopic level, with aligned fiber bundles bonded together to distribute stress efficiently. According to the researchers, this hierarchical structure contributes to the material’s unusual combination of toughness and durability.

Tuned for human body

The team also tested fused silk for biomedical applications. Animal studies showed the material triggered only mild immune responses that reduced over time.

Researchers found they could tune how quickly the material degrades by adjusting processing conditions. Less densely fused versions allowed cells to infiltrate gradually, while denser forms resisted breakdown and remained stable for longer periods.

“We can control how fast the material degrades depending on the conditions we use,” Li said.

The researchers believe the material could eventually be used in orthopedic implants such as plates, screws, and fixation devices for bone fractures because of its strength and biocompatibility.

Scientists at the University of Michigan also discovered that fused silk can polarize terahertz radiation, which is used in airport scanners, medical imaging, and chemical detection systems. The team said the property could support future 6G communication technologies capable of transmitting data far faster than today’s 5G networks.

The study was published in the journal Nature Sustainability.

The Blueprint

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With over a decade-long career in journalism, Neetika Walter has worked with The Economic Times, ANI, and Hindustan Times, covering politics, business, technology, and the clean energy sector. Passionate about contemporary culture, books, poetry, and storytelling, she brings depth and insight to her writing. When she isn’t chasing stories, she’s likely lost in a book or enjoying the company of her dogs.