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Results 12611 - 12620 of 13713 for Laboratories
  • Article - 9 Apr 2002
    Steel is a viable alternative to traditional building materials for applications such as frames, lintels and cladding in domestic and light commercial buildings. These applications are explained and...
  • News - 4 May 2004
    Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratoryhave released results from the first experiment at Brookhaven’s Deep Ultraviolet Free Electron Laser (DUV-FEL),...
  • News - 28 Apr 2004
    The legend of Icarus may have a new ending within the next decade, according to a University of Missouri-Rolla researcher helping to develop the world’s first flapping-wing, solar-powered...
  • Article - 11 Mar 2002
    The unique properties of supercritical fluids have lead to their use in nanomaterial production for applications such as biomaterials, foams, high internal phase emulsions, lithography and metal...
  • News - 14 Apr 2004
    For the first time, researchers have identified organic material in interplanetary dust particles (IDPs), gathered from the Earth's stratosphere, that was made before the birth of our Solar...
  • News - 14 Apr 2004
    Duke University researchers may have reached a milestone in physics by cooling and confining a gas of lithium-6 atoms into a kind of oscillating "jelly" exhibiting group behavior...
  • News - 8 Apr 2004
    Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory have helped develop a new technology that converts material dredged from the bottoms of harbors and waterways into a...
  • News - 1 Apr 2004
    Engineers from Duke University have described progress building so-called "smart nanostructures," including billionths-of-a-meter-scale "nanobrushes" that can selectively and reversibly sprout from...
  • Article - 16 Jan 2002
    Nuclear plants are constructed such that they work for several decades. A major challenge faced in their maintenance is to identify the ways to assess two types of phenomena related to corrosion.
  • Article - 15 Jan 2002
    Zirconium is usually contaminated with hafnium due to their chemical similarity. It is resistant to most solvents and performs well in nuclear reactors, where most zirconium metal is used.

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