X-rays capture the ultrafast proton transfer reaction in ionized liquid water, forming the hydroxyl radical and the hydronium ion.
Researchers Build a Particle Accelerator That Fits On a Chip
Just as desktop PCs acquired some of the functions performed by room-sized mainframes, a Stanford team has prototyped a silicon chip that packs some of the punch delivered by current particle accelerators.
Solar Energy Goes Organic
Organic solar cells could be an important part of future power generation, but only if their efficiency increases.
An Unsinkable, Spider-Inspired Metal
Inspired by diving bell spiders, researchers created highly water-repellent metallic structures that could potentially be used to build unsinkable ships in the future.
Volumetric bioprinting: The new paradigm in regenerative medicine
“This work opens new avenues for material scientists and biologists to mimic in the lab the structure of living tissues and to upscale the production of engineered constructs.” ~ Dr. Riccardo Levato and Prof. Chris Moser.
The PicoQuant 25th Single Molecule Workshop
The 25th Single Molecule Workshop brought together renowned researchers with young scientists in Berlin to discuss and exchange latest results in the field.
Smart Compound Eyes Enable Tunable Imaging
A smart, biomimitic compound eye is made from proteins.
Light-Powered Robotic Snails
How a light-powered snail is addressing scalability in robotics.
Complete Freedom for Direct Writing Liquid Metal Patterns
Prof. Jungchul Lee reports a four degrees-of-freedom direct writing technique for liquid metal patterns.
Shedding Red Light on Sports Injuries
Investigating factors that influence red‐light penetration through human tissue.