Tubular Science Improves Polymer Solar Cells
Novel engineered polymers assemble buckyballs into columns using a conventional coating process.
Novel engineered polymers assemble buckyballs into columns using a conventional coating process.
Lasting just a few hundred billionths of a billionth of a second, these bursts offer new tool to study chemistry and magnetism.
Using genetic engineering, scientists improve biomass growth and conversion in woody and grassy feedstocks.
Novel observations suggest a great potential of measuring global gross primary production via solar-induced fluorescence.
First demonstration of high-pressure metastability mapping with ultrafast X-ray diffraction shows objects aren’t as large as previously thought.
Exotic material exhibits an optical response in enormous disproportion to the stimulus—larger than in any known crystal.
Multiple plausible hypotheses in how maximum photosynthetic rates scale across the Earth lead to substantial variability in predicting carbon uptake.
Flexible, tunable technique warms plants without need for electricity, aiding ecosystem research in remote locales.
Intuitive visual analytical model better explains complex architectural scenarios and offers general design principles.
Toolkit lets scientists detect extreme weather in climate simulations far faster than before.
High-performance computing reveals the relationship between DNA and phosphorous uptake.
Americium(III) is selectively and efficiently separated from europium(III) by an extractant in an ionic liquid.