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EXEL Magazine

Editorial design for the research magazine of the Philadelphia-based University.

The front and back covers of the 2012 issue.
Microscopic image of a sheet of carbon nanotubes, a new approach to electric energy storage.
Table of contents.
Spread from the front-of-book News section.
Feature about the study of the rhinoceros beetle for flight aerodynamics, right.
Spread from Community, a front-of-book section with updates on school research in various areas.

The new magazine also uses the letter "X," found in the middle of the university's name, as a distinctive identity device on the cover and throughout the publication.

The front and back covers of the 2013 issue.
The magazine opens with a portfolio of green algae as seen under a microscope.
Table of contents.
Health and medicine department.
Opening spread of an article about humanoid robots. Illustration by Josh Cochran.
Opening spread of a feature about the structural technology of bridges.

Like the premiere issue, the second edition of EXEL features a wide array of visually dynamic scientific photography, illustration and infographics used in modern, inventive layouts to express Drexel's rich research narratives. 

The front and back covers of the 2014 issue.
The first eight pages feature a gallery of black-and-white images of microscopic diatoms.
Feature about researchers investigating how a sweetener can be a human-safe pesticide.
Opening illustration by Tavis Coburn for a story about a human study on the effects of Tasers.
Paleontology feature about two matching turtle bones discovered at least 162 years apart.
Two examples of the signature infographic style featured throughout the publication.
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