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Results 471 - 480 of 722 for Porous materials
  • News - 11 Oct 2010
    Actuators are devices that convert electrical energy into mechanical energy, such as the battery-powered device inside a cell phone that causes the phone to vibrate. When this process is reversed...
  • News - 3 Sep 2010
    Sugar, salt, alcohol and a little serendipity led a Northwestern University research team to discover a new class of nanostructures that could be used for gas storage and food and medical...
  • News - 16 Jul 2010
    Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/421af7/nanostructured_mat) has announced the addition of John Wiley and Sons Ltd's new book "Nanostructured Materials and...
  • News - 24 Jun 2010
    Organic semiconductors are very promising candidates as starting materials for the manufacture of cheap, large area and flexible electronic components such as transistors, diodes and sensors on a...
  • News - 28 May 2010
    Jeffrey Long's lab will soon host a round-the-clock, robotically choreographed hunt for carbon-hungry materials. The Berkeley Lab chemist leads a diverse team of scientists whose goal is to...
  • News - 7 Apr 2010
    Thanks to two technologies developed by Professor Benoît Marsan and his team at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) Chemistry Department, the scientific and commercial future of solar cells...
  • News - 17 Mar 2010
    A team of McGill Chemistry Department researchers led by Dr. Hanadi Sleiman has achieved a major breakthrough in the development of nanotubes - tiny "magic bullets" that could one day...
  • News - 1 Mar 2010
    Vacuum panels are particularly good for insulating buildings - as long as the vacuum does not leak. A tiny pressure sensor constantly checks the condition of the vacuum and indicates whether the...
  • News - 16 Feb 2010
    Computational modeling tools developed at the Georgia Institute of Technology could accelerate development of a new type of membrane technology that will boost the efficiency of energy-related gas...
  • News - 5 Feb 2010
    A team of Stanford researchers is producing batteries and simple capacitors from ordinary textiles dipped in nanoparticle-infused ink. The conductive textiles - dubbed "eTextiles" -...

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