Future devices will continue to probe the frontier of the very small, and at scales where functionality depends on mere atoms, even the tiniest flaw matters. Researchers at Rice University have shown ...
For the first time ever, scientists have uncovered a vast field of tektites in Brazil — mysterious glassy fragments forged when a powerful extraterrestrial object slammed into Earth about 6.3 million ...
A 2026 informational consumer evaluation of CitrusBurn's orange peel trick marketing claims, thermogenic resistance ...
Nanoscale molybdenum disulfide memristors integrated onto standard CMOS chips achieve the lowest switching voltage reported ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Ultra-thin electronics to become more efficient with US researchers’ technique to spot defects
Researchers in the United States have developed a new technique that can spot hidden ...
While Boyce’s crystal may be the largest single crystal of copper sulfate, students at the Kurfrüst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium in Germany hold the record for overall size. Their polymorphic crystal reached a ...
Nanostructured materials are key to food safety, offering antimicrobial properties and smart packaging solutions that extend ...
An international research team has demonstrated how conventional radiative cooling coatings can be optimized to further reduce building surface temperatures, cutting energy consumption, while also ...
Electrically switchable adhesion in a ferroelectric polymer film enables clean, fast, solvent-free transfer of graphene from copper growth substrates to target surfaces.
Researchers in the United States have developed a way to detect hidden defects in ultra-thin electronic materials that can cause devices to fail at lower voltages.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results