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Results 1781 - 1790 of 1931 for Nanotechnology
  • Article - 26 Mar 2020
    Nanotechnology has a role in solving different environmental and health issues which occurs with the excessive usage of chemical fertilizers in agricultural practices. Many nanoparticles show improved...
  • Article - 24 Mar 2020
    This article looks at whether polymers and nanostructured polymer materials can exhibit an artificial phototropistic behavior that is usually only seen in natural materials and organisms.
  • Article - 12 Mar 2020
    Nanotoxicology studies the toxicity of nanomaterials or nanoparticles. Materials that are toxic at the nanoscale might not be toxic at the macroscale.
  • Article - 11 Mar 2020
    A nanoparticle’s safety is often determined by its toxicity on the human body. Toxicity can be defined in several ways, and it is not only the toxicity of the nanoparticle that is important but also...
  • Article - 10 Mar 2020
    Silver is a well-known antimicrobial and antibacterial agent, and is most commonly used in its bulk forms as silver ions or silver salts. However, because nanoforms are known to be more active than...
  • Article - 3 Feb 2020
    Back in 2014, a team of researchers from the University of Lausanne, Switzerland, uncovered the exact underlying mechanisms that allow nanoparticles to detect fingerprints.
  • Article - 16 Jan 2020
    In the global energy market, hydrocarbons have been the principal source of energy supply. Global energy demand has increased significantly over the last few decades, but the discovery of new oil and...
  • Article - 13 Jan 2020
    Scientists in South Korea have discovered the fundamental principle that gives two-dimensional materials, like graphene, the properties that allow them to work as a next-generation semiconductor, is...
  • Article - 13 Jan 2020
    Quantum dots have become a principal topic in nanotechnology, finding applications in varying fields, from renewable energy to medical imaging. First created back in the 1980s, the dots are made of...
  • Article - 9 Jan 2020
    The function of traditional computing is reaching its capacity. Transistor-based silicon technologies that rely on binary encoding, are failing to meet the needs of modern science.

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