Crystalline CHANGE TOPIC

Crystalline materials news, July 2015

Breaking news by young scientist: you don't need a magnetic material to create spin current from insulators.

Engineers have developed a new approach to structuring the catalysts used in essential reactions in the chemical and energy fields.

“Superconducting Materials: Conventional, Unconventional and Undetermined” now available.

Take a look at the latest Materials Today impact factors.

Perovskite modules are better than any solar technology that is commercially available today.

The Air Force Research Lab has announced the Materials Science and Engineering Data Challenge.

SoftwareX is now open for submissions.

Chemists have developed a semiconducting material in which individual phosphorus atoms are replaced by arsenic.

Researchers present a new device in which they have harnessed graphene’s unique optical and electronic properties.

Researchers are now studying what happens when different drugs come in contact with this silver coating.

German physicists have successfully employed ultrafast terahertz spectroscopy to determine the basic properties of spintronics components.

The Publishing Team of Elsevier Physics congratulates Dr. Yablonovitch to this great distinction!

Postdoctoral scholars in between jobs can get free access to Elsevier's journals and books on ScienceDirect.

Researchers have confirmed diamond’s credentials as a bioimplant material and devised a protocol for culturing neurons from stem cells on its surface.

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