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A new fruit wash removes pesticides and extends shelf life

University of British Columbia researchers have developed a natural, biodegradable wash that removed up to 96% of pesticide residue from fruit and slowed browning and moisture loss. This could mean safer apples, grapes and ...

A nanoscale robotic cleaner can hunt, capture and remove bacteria

Tiny robots—around 50 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair—open up fascinating possibilities: they enable the controlled manipulation of objects far too small for human hands. This brings us closer to a long-standing ...

Momentum-engineered photonic states make bulk silicon shine

An international team of researchers, led by scientists from the University of California, Irvine, has demonstrated a fundamentally new way to make silicon emit light—overcoming one of the most persistent limitations in modern ...

Stitching precise patterns—with lasers

Just as embroiderers, with needle and thread, can transform plain fabric into an intricate pattern, engineers can use lasers and polymers to create flexible, complex structures that could transform life-saving sensing technology. ...

Structural color can now be printed with an inkjet printer

While traditional printer pigments fade and most structural color can't be printed, Kobe University material engineer Sugimoto Hiroshi has been working on nothing short of a revolution in the way color is produced.

More news

Nanomaterials
Graphene 'nano-aquariums' capture atomic-resolution videos of gold atoms in solvents
Bio & Medicine
Graphene 'scaffold' recruits bone cells and helps the body regenerate fractures
Nanophysics
Engineers introduce first synthetic charged domain wall in 2D material
Nanophysics
Anisotropic 2D crystal with hyperbolic localized plasmon resonances unlocks additional degree of freedom
Nanophysics
Quantum twisting microscope reveals electron-electron interactions in graphene at room temperature
Bio & Medicine
Copper-loaded starch nanoparticles can target bacteria in microbial communities
Bio & Medicine
How graphene oxide kills bacteria while sparing human cells
Nanophysics
Ultrafast microscopy sheds light on metallic nanoframe behavior
Bio & Medicine
Light-activated nanoparticles trigger copper overload to kill cancer cells
Nanophysics
Programmable superconducting diode can flow on command
Bio & Medicine
Beyond lipid nanoparticles: How custom polymers and AI may reshape gene therapies
Nanophysics
Fieldoscopy reveals femtosecond optical switching in 15 nm indium tin oxide nanocrystals
Nanomaterials
Researchers create a three-nanometer single-layer UiO-66 MOF nanosheet
Nanomaterials
Laser-modified graphene enables molecule-thick films to grow only where needed
Nanophysics
Silicon nanospheres boost WS₂ second-harmonic generation 40-fold while preserving polarization
Nanomaterials
Polymer uses movable molecular rings to overcome durability–degradability trade-off
Nanophysics
Electronics of the future: Ultra-efficient graphene switch developed at nanometer scale
Bio & Medicine
New lipid nanoparticle design improves precision of mRNA vaccine delivery
Nanomaterials
Belt-like VO₂(B) single crystals unlock high-sensitivity gas detection at room temperature
Nanomaterials
Chaos as a matter of direction: Researchers build layered material where order and disorder coexist

Other news

Social Sciences
People with dark personality traits are naturally inclined towards leadership roles, finds new study
Plants & Animals
How poison frogs built a chemical weapons system one evolutionary step at a time
Condensed Matter
Surprising link between metallicity and superconductivity uncovered in twisted trilayer graphene
Quantum Physics
Universal quantum protocol extracts maximum work without knowing a system's state in advance
Optics & Photonics
Flat optics move toward market with 300-per-second metalens production
Optics & Photonics
Bright quantum light emission achieved at room temperature in 2D semiconductors
Ecology
PFAS detected in dolphin milk may pass from mothers to calves
Earth Sciences
Earth's tectonic elevator hauls ancient buried microbes back to the seafloor to revive and spread
Earth Sciences
Taiwan landslide's hidden motion comes into focus as fiber optics track deep slip
Environment
Wildfires used to 'go to sleep' at night. Climate change is turning them into prime burning hours
Other
Saturday Citations: Neuroinflammaging treatment stuns; a hidden magma lake; decoding little red dots
Soft Matter
Quantum-informed AI improves long-term turbulence forecasts while using far less memory
Earth Sciences
Indonesia's fire crisis comes into focus as high-resolution satellite maps expose 5.62 million hectares affected
Cell & Microbiology
Antioxidant glutathione discovered to play a key role in proper protein folding
Plants & Animals
Parrots are not just mimicking words—they use proper names like humans to identify individuals
Analytical Chemistry
Platinum-free catalyst splits hydrogen from water for energy, running 1,000 hours at industry standards
Earth Sciences
Machine learning detects more than 60,000 earthquakes during 2025 Santorini sequence
Ecology
Warmer streams may be draining river food webs by sending more carbon into the air
Bio & Medicine
Nanobody repairs misfolded CFTR inside cells, boosting function in cystic fibrosis
Plants & Animals
Want to restore oyster reefs? Find a site where they don't wash away or become buried under the sand

A new, useful absorption limit for ultra-thin films

Ultrathin, conductive films such as those made of graphene are widely used in modern optoelectronic devices, but it has been thought that their efficacy is fundamentally limited: they can absorb at most half of the incident ...

Peanut waste can be turned into high-quality futuristic graphene

Researchers at UNSW have discovered a new way to make graphene, a remarkable "wonder material," using just discarded peanut shells. The development opens the door to cheaper, more sustainable electronics and energy storage ...

2D memristors could help solve AI's energy problem

New generations of memristors could reliably store information directly within the molecular structures of graphene-like materials. In a new review published in Nanoenergy Advances, Gennady Panin of the Russian Academy of ...