R&D Round-Up
Our latest look at technological and scientific breakthroughs in Germany features everything from electricity and robots to quantum computing and particle acceleration.
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Our latest look at technological and scientific breakthroughs in Germany features everything from electricity and robots to quantum computing and particle acceleration.
A team from the Fraunhofer Institute for Social Energy Research (ISE) in Freiburg and the NWO Institute AMOLF in Amsterdam have bettered the record for silicon solar cells.
The Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences and start-up Wingcopter are bringing food to out-of-the-way residents of a western German town.
A record number of international university students are attending German institutions of higher education.
Therapeutics and autonomous driving, recycling and space junk, are all part of our regular survey of some of the most interesting developments in German research and development.
American company Applied Materials and Dresden’s Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems (IPMS) are constructing a new technology center for semiconductor metrology and process analyses.
Japanese pharmaceuticals giant Takeda has put hundreds of millions of euros in recent years into its location in the southwestern German town of Singen to produce its anti-dengue-fever vaccine “Qdenga.”
German government spending on energy research rose by 13 percent last year. That's according to the Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action’s annual report on the topic.
Germany's research and development (R&D) landscape is second to none in the EU- whether it be practical, theoretical or industrial research. Here’s a round of some of the latest R&D breakthroughs “Made in Germany.”
Germany's mobility revolution is moving at pace, with electric vehicle infrastructure growing and new service models and battery technologies being developed.