Pratt School of Engineering

ECE News Page

Nov 14, 2011

Tracking Dragonflies on the Wing


Duke University electrical engineers have developed a wirelessly powered telemetry system that is light and powerful enough to allow scientists to study the intricate neurological activity of... FULL STORY
Oct 07, 2011

Mine Detection Software Identifies Cancer Cells


Medical researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have demonstrated that software developed by a Duke University electrical engineer for finding and recognizing undersea mines can help doctors... FULL STORY
Aug 11, 2011

Effortless Sailing with Fluid Flow Cloak


DURHAM, N.C. – Duke engineers have already shown that they can “cloak” light and sound, making objects invisible -- now, they have demonstrated the theoretical ability to significantly increase the... FULL STORY
Aug 01, 2011

Manipulating Light at Will


DURHAM, N.C. – Duke electrical engineers have developed a man-made material that they say literally allows them to manipulate light at will. FULL STORY
Jul 27, 2011

A Fractal Design Approach to Ease Verification


In 1994, a small glitch was uncovered in a floating point unit in the Pentium P5 microprocessor. Unfortunately, it wasn’t detected until after it had been installed in countless computers, which... FULL STORY
Jun 30, 2011

WiFi "Napping" Doubles Phone Battery Life


DURHAM, N.C. – A Duke University graduate student has found ways to double the battery life of mobile devices – such as smartphones or laptop computers – by making changes to WiFi technology. Wifi is... FULL STORY
Jun 30, 2011

Acoustical Cloaking Achieved


After already showing that simple man-made materials can be employed as invisibility cloaks or used to facilitate wireless power transmission, Duke University engineers have now demonstrated that... FULL STORY
Jun 29, 2011

New Smartphone App Automatically Tags Photos


DURHAM, N.C. -- So much for tagging photographs with names, locations and activities yourself – a new cell phone application can take care of that for you. The system works by taking advantage of... FULL STORY
May 23, 2011

Novel Man-Made Material Could Facilitate Wireless Power


DURHAM, N.C. – Electrical engineers at Duke University have determined that unique man-made materials should theoretically make it possible to improve the power transfer to small devices, such as... FULL STORY
Oct 21, 2010

Light on Silicon Better than Copper?


DURHAM, N.C. -- Step aside copper and make way for a better carrier of information -- light. As good as the metal has been in zipping information from one circuit to another on silicon inside... FULL STORY