Carbon Deep Beneath Earth's Surface Offers Clues to History of Life
Johns Hopkins University led team also developed new theory about how diamonds form.
Read more about Carbon Deep Beneath Earth's Surface Offers Clues to History of Life
Johns Hopkins University led team also developed new theory about how diamonds form.
Read more about Carbon Deep Beneath Earth's Surface Offers Clues to History of Life
Researchers at Purdue University have demonstrated a new process to convert all biomass into liquid fuel, and the method could make possible mobile processing plants.
Read more about New Versatile Process Efficiently Converts Biomass to Liquid Fuel
Researchers at the University of Maryland have invented a single tiny structure that includes all the components of a battery that they say could bring about the ultimate miniaturization of energy storage components.
Read more about A Billion Holes Can Make a Battery
Wright State University researchers have discovered a formula that accurately predicts the rate at which soil develops from the surface to the underlying rock.
Read more about Formula Developed by Wright State Scientists Could Shed Light on Global Climate Change
Chemical engineers at Stanford have designed a catalyst that could help produce vast quantities of pure hydrogen through electrolysis.
Read more about Stanford Engineers Use Technique From Petrochemical Industry to Store Solar Energy
Researchers at MIT clear hurdles toward a new kind of 2-D microchip using different electron properties.
Read more about New Findings Could Point the Way to “Valleytronics”
Researchers at Oregon State for the first time have developed a method to track through the human body the movement of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs, as extraordinarily tiny amounts of these potential carcinogens are biologically processed and eliminated.
Read more about New Technology Tracks Carcinogens As They Move Through the Body
New work from Carnegie's Ivan Naumov and Russell Hemley delves into the chemistry underlying some surprising recent observations about hydrogen, and reveals remarkable parallels between hydrogen and graphene under extreme pressures.
Read more about The Simplest Element: Turning Hydrogen Into “Graphene”
Cornell University and Berkeley Lab reports on electric field switching of ferromagnetism at room temperature.
Read more about Switching to Spintronics
An international team of scientists, led by physicists at the University of Arkansas, has characterized the electronic and magnetic structure in artificially synthesized materials called transition metal oxides.
Read more about Physicists Advance Understanding of Transition Metal Oxides Used in Electronics
New understanding of how to halt photons could lead to miniature particle accelerators, improved data transmission.
Read more about Trapping Light with a Twister
The most complicated crystal structure ever produced in a computer simulation has been achieved by researchers at the University of Michigan.
Read more about World’s Most Complex Crystal Simulated at U-Michigan