The Role of Stripes in Superconducting Behavior
Using neutron diffraction, movement of charged atoms arranged as “stripes” was captured for the first time.
Using neutron diffraction, movement of charged atoms arranged as “stripes” was captured for the first time.
Adding platinum atoms tunes the color of emitted light.
Researchers have invented a new x-ray imaging technique that could reveal key atomic-scale properties in ferroelectric magnetic materials.
A triple point, where three different atomic structures coexist simultaneously, has been uncovered in vanadium dioxide.
Electrons can behave as if they are a hundred times heavier than free electrons and superconducting.
Using sulfur-rich, highly ionic compounds as cathodes and electrolytes enables solid-state lithium-sulfur rechargeable batteries.
Proton radiography is a new tool for imaging melting and solidification of metals.
Magnetic domains exhibit the same dynamic jamming behavior universal to granular materials, polymers, glasses and emulsions.
Ionic liquids found to behave differently than expected.
The discovery of the first binary magnetic quasicrystals will enable the unraveling of the fundamental relationship between the structure and magnetism in aperiodic materials.
Using artificial nanostructures to control the properties of light could play a prominent role in the future of computing.
Designing protein assemblies whose interactions can be manipulated to respond to a single environmental cue.