ScienceDaily: Engineering and Construction News |
- Copper shines as flexible conductor
- Plug 'n' play protein crystals
- A new, tunable device for spintronics
- Spot light on tailor-made multicyclic type of polymers
- Industrial management: Avoiding alarms
Copper shines as flexible conductor Posted: 29 Aug 2014 07:35 AM PDT By turning instead to copper, both abundant and cheap, researchers have developed a way of making flexible conductors cost-effective enough for commercial application. |
Plug 'n' play protein crystals Posted: 29 Aug 2014 05:39 AM PDT Almost a hundred years ago in 1929 Linus Pauling presented the famous Pauling's Rules to describe the principles governing the structure of complex ionic crystals. These rules essentially describe how the arrangement of atoms in a crystal is critically dependent on the size of the atoms, their charge and type of bonding. According to scientists today, similar rules can be applied to prepare ionic colloidal crystals consisting of oppositely charged proteins and virus particles. |
A new, tunable device for spintronics Posted: 28 Aug 2014 10:53 AM PDT An international team of scientists has developed a tunable spin-charge converter made of GaAs. Spin-charge converters are important devices in spintronics, an electronic which is not only based on the charge of electrons but also on their spin and the spin-related magnetism. Spin-charge converters enable the transformation of electric into magnetic signals and vice versa. |
Spot light on tailor-made multicyclic type of polymers Posted: 27 Aug 2014 06:37 PM PDT Scientists have synthesized multicyclic type of polymers for the first time offering insights for tailoring polymer properties as well as the mathematics of complex geometries. |
Industrial management: Avoiding alarms Posted: 27 Aug 2014 06:37 PM PDT An intelligent system that predicts when alarms might be triggered could greatly improve the management of industrial plants. |
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