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Results 1751 - 1760 of 1999 for Nanomaterials
  • Article - 1 Nov 2017
    Treatment that employs large size material for drug delivery presents problems such as poor bioviability, low solubility, a lack of targeted delivery and generalized side effects.
  • Article - 24 Oct 2017
    Advances in nanotechnology are increasingly being utilized in the life sciences. Designs and structures at the nanometer scale are being applied to fields such as pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and...
  • Article - 24 Oct 2017
    Protein-based nanotechnology combines the study of nanoscale proteins with the expanding field of nanotechnology.
  • Article - 12 Sep 2017
    Within the design of such scaffolds, the materials undergoing a serious amount of research are hydrogels, as they can produce realistic tissue constructs resembling living tissues.
  • Article - 8 Sep 2017
    In an effort to combine graphene and nanoparticles, a team of Scientists have developed a revolutionary synthesis method that enhances the phenomenal properties of these materials without any need to...
  • Article - 11 Aug 2017
    Produced as a result of the combustion of fossil fuels, CO2 emissions have been associated with raising the average global temperature, which thereby seriously affects normal weather patterns, the...
  • Article - 18 Jul 2017
    PiFM is a technique that employs a high degree of chemical specificity, in a non-destructive manner, with no need for additives or labelling. We take a look at the benefits of using PiFM with your...
  • Article - 13 Jul 2017
    PiFM is a scanning probe (spectroscopic probing) method which allows for the imaging of optical near-fields in nanoscale structures that can map their morphology and obtain spectroscopic information,...
  • Article - 22 Jun 2017
    To develop a method of attaching nanoparticles to functionalized graphene without distorting its native planarity and properties, the group of researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago...
  • Article - 25 May 2017
    A team of international researchers have engineered the surrounding dielectric environment to tune the electronic bandgap and exciton binding energy in WS2 and WSe2 monolayers by hundreds of meV.

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