Nanomaterials news, March 2015

Alan Leshner joins the Elsevier Materials Science Council

Former CEO of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) joins the Elsevier Materials Science Council.

Elsevier puts data in the spotlight

Data can be shared and reused freely, through some new initiatives now running at Elsevier and the Materials Today family of journals.

How to make large volumes of polymer nanofibers.

Researchers have created new structures that exploit the electromechanical properties of specific nanofibers to stretch to up to seven times their length.

In an experiment researchers used NV centers in diamond to sense the properties of magnetic field noise.

Magnetic nanoparticles combined with a derivative of the spice turmeric could help make earlier diagnoses of Alzheimer’s easier.

First ever photograph of light behaving as both wave and stream of particles.

Multiphase liquid pores for separation science.

Scientists have developed nanocarriers that site-selectively release medicines/drugs at the tumor site in human and mouse lungs.

We are very pleased to welcome nominations for awards in the Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer for early-career researchers.

The journal Applied Surface Science is delighted to invite young researchers to apply for the Frans Habraken Best Paper Award.

Researchers have devised a scalable and efficient means of producing Sn-containing carbon nanostructure for Li-ion batteries using a molten salt process.

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