In thin, two-dimensional semiconductors, electrons move, spin and synchronize in unusual ways. For researchers, understanding the way these electrons carry out their intricate dances—and learning to manipulate their choreography—not only lets them...
Oct 3, 2022
Electrochromic (EC) devices have been regarded as promising candidates for energy-saving smart windows, next-generation displays, and wearable electronics. Monovalent ions such as H+ and Li+ based electrolytes are the benchmark insertion ions for ...
Oct 3, 2022
South Korean universities discovered a new method to draw data on a nanometer scale.
Oct 3, 2022
Volunteer runners are set to break-in their new and innovative graphene-enhanced trainers to help launch COP27.
Oct 3, 2022
Volunteer runners break-in their new and innovative graphene-enhanced trainers to help launch COP27.
Oct 3, 2022
Two milliseconds – or two-thousandths of a second – is an extraordinarily long time in quantum computing.
Oct 3, 2022
First Graphene will work with the Breedon Group, Morgan Sindall Construction & Infrastructure and the University of Manchester to develop a new reduced-CO2 graphene-enhanced cement. The consortium is currently formulating the cement using ...
Oct 3, 2022
a collaboration between Sparc Technologies, Swinburne University and Composite Materials Engineering focuses on smart composite structures to help engineers detect structural defects in planes and rockets before they cause disaster. The industry-l...
Oct 2, 2022
The world’s tiniest plumbing could potentially funnel drugs to individual human cells. Working on microscopic pipes just a millionth the width of a single strand of human hair, Johns Hopkins University researchers devised a method to protect these...
Oct 1, 2022
Apple's Watch Ultra, with its 2000-nit digital display and GPS capabilities, is a far cry from its Revolutionary War-era self-winding forebears. What sorts of wondrous body-mounted technologies might we see another hundred years hence? In his...
Oct 1, 2022
