ScienceDaily: Engineering and Construction News |
- Copper foam turns carbon dioxide into useful chemicals
- Insights into a new class of semiconducting materials
- Making eco-friendly 'pre-fab nanoparticles': Versatile, water-soluble nano-modules
Copper foam turns carbon dioxide into useful chemicals Posted: 12 Aug 2014 01:37 PM PDT Scientists have discovered that copper foam could provide a new way of converting excess carbon dioxide into useful industrial chemicals. |
Insights into a new class of semiconducting materials Posted: 12 Aug 2014 01:35 PM PDT A new paper describes investigations of the fundamental optical properties of a new class of semiconducting materials known as organic-inorganic 'hybrid' perovskites. |
Making eco-friendly 'pre-fab nanoparticles': Versatile, water-soluble nano-modules Posted: 12 Aug 2014 01:33 PM PDT Materials chemists, polymer scientists and device physicists have reported on a breakthrough technique for controlling assembly of nanoparticles over multiple length scales that may allow cheaper, ecologically friendly manufacture of organic photovoltaics and other electronic devices. |
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