Iridescence, or sheen that shifts color depending on your viewing angle, is pretty in peacock feathers.
Iridescence, or sheen that shifts color depending on your viewing angle, is pretty in peacock feathers.
New room-temperature process could lead to less expensive solar cells and other electronic devices.
New approach could improve the efficiency of devices that harness power from temperature differences
Artificial bone, created using stem cells and a new lightweight plastic, could soon be used to heal shattered limbs.
Solar cells made using a process like spray painting have been developed by a research collaboration between scientists at the University of Sheffield.
Flow control of single quantum dot enables measurements with nanoscale accuracy at lower cost
National SBIR Conference is the largest gathering of federal government granting agencies and innovators seeking or receiving SBIR funding
Scientists at the University of Glasgow have developed a new method to make packaged food safer for consumers and more long-lived on the shelf by harnessing the germ-killing power of ozone.
Dr Declan Diver and Dr Hugh Potts of the University's School of Physics and Astronomy have prototyped a system to rapidly, safely and temporarily turn some of the oxygen inside the sealed packaging into ozone, a very effective germicide.
Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Nanopillars Making Solar Cells More Efficient" report to their offering.
Groundbreaking scientific research has been published on carbon nanotube fiber with high thermal and electrical conductivity.
Scientists from the Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC) at the University of Southampton are part of an international project that is investigating the use of fibre lasers in ground-breaking particle accelerator technologies, such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).
More than £6m of funding has been awarded to enhance the development of biopharmaceuticals.
A new centre dedicated to examining the changing nature of copyright and the need for new business models in the digital age is being launched at the University of Glasgow.