Researchers from Mainz and Aschaffenburg use a sugary material to help save our depleted ozone layer.
![Sweets for a Healthy Ozone Layer](https://www.advancedsciencenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/sugar-3485430_1280-e1534751650198.jpg)
Researchers from Mainz and Aschaffenburg use a sugary material to help save our depleted ozone layer.
Tannin, an organic substance present in some seeds, barks, and other plant tissues, could hold the key to more sustainable and eco-friendly plastics manufacturing.
Historically, the focus has been: how much water does the environment need? Finding the “right” allocation of water between consumptive and environmental water uses is a question of allocative efficiency. However, once water is allocated to the environment, question becomes: how can we get the best outcomes from this water?
In a WIREs Nanomedicine and Nanobiotechnology review, a discussion about the need for a unifying interpretation of the available experimental data regarding nanomedicines is presented.
An integrative approach of modeling and hydrogen-deuterium exchange helps to describe the enzyme that regulates glycogen levels in muscles and liver.
A highlight on new perspectives and data on the anatomical organization and functional interactions of corticolimbic circuits in learning, memory and disease.
Researchers highlight the potential and current biological and biomedical applications of micro- and nanoparticle research.
Chunhai Fan, Ali Khademhosseini, André Nel, Catherine Picart and Nicholas Peppas join the Editorial Advisory Board of Advanced Healthcare Materials.
The mental health toll of the COVID-19 pandemic.
How small particles, such as colloids, move through the soil is important to understand as many pose a significant threat to public and environmental health.