The trend toward “smart factories” powered by data-driven automation is currently changing the landscape of the manufacturing sector. Learn how our research is harnessing new opportunities to advance both human and environmental well-being.
Researchers at McMaster University have developed a new way to purify carbon nanotubes – the smaller, nimbler semiconductors that are expected to replace silicon within computer chips and a wide array of electronics.
Cranston’s research work explores the use of trees and materials from nature and how to reuse them in a wide range of sustainable and renewable products.
The McMaster Fraunhofer Project Centre for Biomedical Engineering and Advanced Manufacturing (BEAM) research facility will be home to several of McMaster’s leading researchers.