3DIcon Corporation (OTCBB:TDCP), a developer of volumetric, three-dimension projection and display technologies, today announced that it has signed a Materials Transfer Agreement ("MTA") with the regents of the Univ...
Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/e9ae15/rubber_nanocomposi) has announced the addition of John Wiley and Sons Ltd's new book "Rubber Nanocomposites: Preparation, Properties and Applic...
NanoViricides, Inc. reports that the results of the evaluation of several of its nanoviricides® anti-Ebola agents were presented July 17th at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Virology, July 17-21, at Montana State University, Bozeman, MT. Dr. Corinne Scully delivered the presentation, which was entitled “Polymeric Micelle Nanomaterials as Antiviral Compounds For Ebola Virus Infection.”
Nanoparticles in ivy may hold the key to making sunscreen safer and more effective.
When Mingjun Zhang was watching his son play in the yard, he was hit with a burning question: "What makes the ivy in his b...
Tomorrow's television and computer screens could be brighter, clearer and more energy-efficient as a result of a process developed by a team of researchers from Canada and the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge Nation...
Inspired by the social interactions of ants and slime molds, University of Pittsburgh engineers have designed artificial cells capable of self-organizing into independent groups that can communicate and cooperate.
Research conducted by a Kansas State University team may help solve a problem that scientists and pest controllers have been itching to for years.
With renewed attention being given to nuclear power, a UT Dallas researcher has snagged an $875,000 Department of Energy (DOE) grant to explore a means to boost power plant efficiency and reduce nuclear waste.
Goodrich Corporation will work with the University of Dayton Research Institute (UDRI) to produce an innovative nanomaterial with metal-like conductive properties into a rugged composite structure, in sizes suitable for large-scale commercial aerospace applications.
Chemists from New York University and Russia's St. Petersburg State University have created crystals that can twist and untwist, pointing to a much more varied process of crystal growth than previously thought. Their...
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