Researchers hope that their properties might be altered to permit nanodiamonds to be used as catalysts for generating hydrogen from sunlight.
29 January 2015
The Physics Innovation Award is a competition inviting you to come up with original innovative ideas to improve the publishing experience.
28 January 2015Zara Preston
University of British Columbia physicists have detected 'charge ordering' in electron-doped cuprate superconductors for the first time.
27 January 2015
Revealing hidden structures in domain interfaces in organic semiconductors.
23 January 2015Laurie Donaldson
Rice University scientists advanced their recent development of laser-induced graphene (LIG) by producing and testing stacked.
23 January 2015
Outstanding contributions recognized at the Materials Today Asia conference.
22 January 2015Stewart Bland
Tandem perovskite-semiconductor promise for solar energy efficiency boost.
20 January 2015David Bradley
Researchers measured the time electrons needed to travel through a film consisting of a few layers a of magnesium atoms.
15 January 2015
Although blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs): how do they actually work?
14 January 2015Laurie Donaldson
The Editorial Board of Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Section A (NIMA) is currently accepting nominations for the Kai Siegbahn Prize.
9 January 2015Zara Preston
Resilience to extreme conditions by the most transparent, lightweight and flexible material for conducting electricity.
8 January 2015
Dr Subhash Mahajan, Coordinating Editor of Acta Materialia, will receive the prestigious Institute of Metals/Robert Franklin Mehl Award.
8 January 2015Baptiste Gault
New Editor-in-Chief announced for Diamond and Related Materials
8 January 2015
The 2014 Materials Today Cover Competition winners have been revealed...
7 January 2015Zara Preston
An international team of researchers has developed a drug delivery technique that utilizes graphene strips as “flying carpets”.
6 January 2015
What were your favourite Materials Science news items in December 2014?
5 January 2015Zara Preston
A flexible, self-powered piezoelectric motion sensor for use by Alzheimer’s patients has been developed by Korean researchers.
5 January 2015Laurie Winkless