Superhydrophobic surfaces, characterized by their ability to repel water with a contact angle above 150° and a sliding angle below 10°, offer a range of applications from self-cleaning and anti-corrosion to oil/water separation and droplet manipulation.
HIMEJI, February 6, 2024 – DECTRIS Japan celebrates 3 years since its establishment in January 2021, facilitating the dialogue with national X-ray research facilities, and establishing itself as the new distributor...
Recent years have seen the rise of carbon-based catalysts, particularly nitrogen-doped nanocarbons, as dependable, sustainable substitutes for the metal catalysts that have long been employed to promote chemical processes.
Precision measurement is essential for many industries. A team of researchers at CSEM has developed a sensing technology that sets new standards in this field – by using the interplay of light and shadow.
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have discovered that adding a layer of magnesium improves the properties of tantalum, a superconducting material that shows great promise for building qubits, the basis of quantum computers.
A novel substance has been created by the University of Barcelona (UAB) and Catalan Institute for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (ICN2) researchers to combat the spread of diseases, pathogens, and antibiotic resistance
SAW technologies have a wide range of applications in research and are crucial to microfluidics because of their high accuracy and quick actuation.
Researchers at the University of California, Irvine and Los Alamos National Laboratory, publishing in the latest issue of Nature Communications, describe the discovery of a new method that transforms everyday materials like glass into materials scientists can use to make quantum computers.
One of the most widely used rechargeable battery technologies in the modern era is lithium-ion batteries.
Researchers from Rice University have discovered that graphene, produced from metallurgical coke—a byproduct of coal—could not only enhance the strength of cement but also replace sand in the composition of concrete.
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