Nanomaterials news, October 2014

Introducing Materials Today Communications

Materials Today is proud to announce the successful launch of Materials Today Communications.

Nanoengineers at the University of California, San Diego recently invented a new method of lithography.

Elsevier is delighted to announce that the first issue of Materials Today: Proceedings is now available.

Empa toxicologist Harald Krug has lambasted his colleagues in the journal Angewandte Chemie.

Stacking graphene sheets into porous 3D structures.

Nanomedicines consisting of nanoparticles for targeted drug delivery to specific tissues and cells offer new solutions for cancer diagnosis and therapy.

Researchers have unveiled a new method to form tiny 3D metal nanoparticles in prescribed shapes and dimensions using DNA as a construction mold.

Exclusive access to 11 article in the Virtual Special Issue on the Nobel Prize for Physics 2014.

Physicists have now managed to select the direction of the light using an unusual kind of coupling between spin and the direction of propagation.

Coating multi-walled carbon nanotubes to help reduce risk of lung injury through inhalation.

New absorber lights the way to more sensitive optical biosensors.

Fullerenes could act as ball bearings on the nanoscale, helping improve control of nano machines.

Nanoscopic grass stacks like coins for solar power.

Nano Energy Award winner 2014 is announced.

Find out who won the awards at the International Conference on Diamond and Carbon Materials 2014.

Electrical engineering researchers have developed a unique nanoscale device that for the first time demonstrates mechanical transportation of light.

Researchers have discovered a way to create a highly sensitive chemical sensor based on the crystalline flaws in graphene sheets.

The top news in the materials science world.

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