search

UMD     This Site





In a paper published in August in the peer-reviewed journal Advanced Energy Materials, Liangbing Hu of UMD’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering and the Energy Research Center, and his team lay out research showing that their transparent wood provides better thermal insulation and lets in nearly as much light as glass, while eliminating glare and providing uniform and consistent indoor lighting.  The findings advance earlier published work on their development of transparent wood. 

“New research has brought the material back into the limelight, in an entirely unexpected way”, says an article on CNN.com,  “The incredible possibilities of 'invisible' wood”, a followup to their original coverage of UMD’s transparent wood.

Two news services spread the news around the world: McClatchy’s wire service got the story out within the U.S. with an article titled ”Now this is cool: Scientists can make wood you can see through.” And in India, the Indo-Asian News Service’s news story  “Wood windows cooler than those of glass” helped the report of the research spread through well-read outlets like The Hindu, The Statesman, and India Live Today.

The news also made waves in business and science news media. Business Insider and Tech Times both wrote about the research, and Science 2.0 and Science Codex carried the story.

 



Related Articles:
Wood filter removes toxic dye from water
A peek under a hybrid’s hood reveals wood?
A View Through Wood Shows Futuristic Applications
A Battery Made of Wood?

August 30, 2016


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Celebrating Black History Month 2026

OmniSpeech Launches Real-Time Voice Deepfake Detection

The Future Takes Flight at Maryland

Maryland Engineering Maintains Status as National Leader in Online Education

Sensor Advancement Breaks Barriers in Brain-Behavior Research

Alchemity Among 17 MIPS-Funded University Research Projects

MATRIX Faculty to Present at International Conference

Alireza Khaligh Named IEEE Fellow

REACH Student Wins Prestigious ARO Scholars Award

University of Maryland Represented at International Forum

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home