Crystalline CHANGE TOPIC

Crystalline materials comment

merging recycling with manufacturing can reform waste into value added materials for re-use

Comment by Sean McGee, Dassault Systèmes BIOVIA.

The biological environment interacts with nanoparticles, changing their structure and properties and thus their potential toxicity.

How to figure out whether contaminated with ions nanoparticles can actually purify liquid crystals from ions?

China and USA are front-runners, competitors and collaborators in the field of nanotechnology

Nanostructured origami is becoming a platform for integrating novel functionality into crystalline nanomembranes.

Thin films/coatings of diamond is now a realistic and exciting choice for biomedical implant.

Nickel metal organic framework with graphene-type structure.

Hiroshi Amano discusses his Nobel prize winning research.

A day not to celebrate.

Filling a knowledge gap to aid climate change and meteorological.

Science meets art, reflecting on the centenary of crystallography - exhibition.

Defect engineering of the thermoelectric material Bi2Te3 via spark plasma sinteringopens up new opportunities in harnessing waste energy.

Efficient and environmentally friendly LEDs require red-shifting luminescent materials or phosphors to achieve white light.

Discussion of the latest developments in the synthesis of nanotwinned diamond to enhance hardness and thermal stability.

Alternative substitutes to transplants.

Carbon monolayers, since 1859.

The UK is widely acknowledged to have led research in graphene, and deserves much credit.

Researchers have successfully toughened a bulk-metallic glass with commercially available spring-shaped steel wire by centrifugal casting.

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Scientists have increased the strength and ductility of an alloy by introducing tiny precipitates into its matrix and tuning their size and spacing.

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boron arsenide (BAs) has unusually high thermal conductivity, which could help keep the next generation of electronic and optoelectronic devices cooler

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