Crystalline CHANGE TOPIC

Crystalline materials news, January 2014

Professor of Chemistry Jason Benedict, PhD, and his team at the University at Buffalo reported on the creation of the new material called UBMOF-1.

Physicists from (FUW) show their method in new ways to form quantum dots that contain single magnetic ions.

Scientists have been able to switch on and off robust ferromagnetism close to room temperature by using low electric fields.

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The MATLAB figure viewer is now available in over 100 Elsevier journals, spanning materials science, computer science, engineering and more.

The team has now demonstrated how a numerical simulation allows them to extract 3D data by combining diffraction patterns.

A new study on the nature of the interactions between halogen atoms in such various materials points to the possibility of designing bendy crystals.

Researchers in the United States have suggested an alternative way to allocate science funding.

A team of scientists from NUS has successfully developed a method to chemically exfoliate molybdenum disulfide crystals.

Researchers are abandoning hunches and intuition to discover cheaper materials that mimic their purer, more expensive counterparts.

New research reveals a new method that allows both the growth and transfer steps of graphene on a silicon wafer.

We look over the best materials science news items that are the most read over the month of December 2013.

Despite extensive research, materials providing lossless conduction of electricity at room temperature are missing up to now.

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