Blog
- Perovskites: Materials Of The Future in Optical Communication 13/03/2019 Researchers at the universities in Linköping and Shenzhen have shown how an inorganic perovskite can be made into a cheap and efficient photodetector that transfers both text and music
- Scientists Give Solar PV A Paint Job 13/03/2019 Researchers and Berkeley Lab have discovered a shade of blue – dating back to ancient Egypt – which has impressive qualities they say could reduce building energy consumption and boost solar energy output. Meanwhile, NREL has developed a perovskite cell material that could be applied to a substrate using a paintbrush.
- Hundreds Of Dietary Supplements Are Tainted With Potentially Harmful Drugs 13/03/2019 Fewer than half of these products were recalled by their makers
- See These Dazzling Images Of A Growing Mouse Embryo 13/03/2019 A new microscope lets scientists peek into the mysterious process of mammalian development
- Patterning Magnetic Graphene With An E-Beam 13/03/2019 Selectively removing hydrogen from partially hydrogenated graphene yields nanoscale patterns useful for microelectronics
- 3Q: Richard Milner On A New U.S. Particle Accelerator 13/03/2019 Proposal for powerful particle collider gets National Academies’ go-ahead.
- Breakthroughs In Graphene Synthesis 13/09/2018 Scientists in Brazil have made the largest chemically synthesised graphene sheet ever reported.
- No Coding Required: Companies Make It Easier Than Ever For Scientists To Use Artificial Intelligence 02/08/2018 AI used to be the specialized domain of data scientists and computer programmers. But companies such as Wolfram Research, which makes Mathematica, are trying to democratize the field, so scientists without AI skills can harness the technology for recognizing patterns in big data.
- When the world of nanotechnology and microbreweries meet 28/06/2002 Researchers have shown that microbrewery waste can be used as a carbon source to synthesize quantum dots.
- Artificial intelligence unravels mysteries of polycrystalline materials 00/00/0000 Researchers at Nagoya University in Japan have used artificial intelligence to discover a new method for understanding small defects called dislocations in polycrystalline materials, materials widely used in information equipment, solar cells, and electronic devices, that can reduce the efficiency of such devices.
- Machine Learning Tracks Moving Cells 00/00/0000 A new software allows users to easily segment, track and analyze the migration of label-free cells.