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Results 41 - 50 of 217 for Silicones
  • Supplier Profile
    Elkington and Fife LLP is a leading firm of patent and trade mark attorneys dealing with all areas of technology.  The firm has offices in Central London and Sevenoaks, Kent. Elkington and Fife...
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    Agilent is a leader in life sciences, diagnostics and applied markets. The company provides laboratories worldwide with instruments, services, consumables, applications and expertise, enabling...
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    We are the measurement insight company committed to performance, and compelled by possibilities. Tektronix designs and manufactures test and measurement solutions to break through the walls of...
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    Graphenea is a leading graphene producer for industrial and research needs. Graphenea has developed a leading synthesis and transfer process to obtain high uniformity monolayer graphene films on any...
  • News - 16 Apr 2019
    UCLA scientists and colleagues have engineered a new device that produces electricity from falling snow. This device is the first of its kind and is economical, thin, small, and flexible resembling a...
  • News - 16 Jul 2009
    Scientists from UCL have created light-activated antimicrobial surfaces that could help fight the spread of hospital-acquired infections (HAIs). Professor Ivan Parkin (UCL Chemistry) and Professor...
  • News - 13 Jan 2011
    A simple technique to make a common virus-killing material significantly more effective is a breakthrough from the Rice University labs of Andrew Barron and Qilin Li. Rather than trying to turn the...
  • News - 11 Aug 2010
    A "smart" nanomaterial recently developed at the University of Dayton Research Institute for multi-purpose use in aircraft coatings, wind turbines and other large-scale commercial...
  • Article - 18 Feb 2021
    Novation Solution, LLC, a material science company, has announced the development of carbon nanotube-based silicon rubber that has a wide range of applications in medical science.
  • News - 27 Jan 2010
    Power-generating rubber films developed by Princeton University engineers could harness natural body movements such as breathing and walking to power pacemakers, mobile phones and other electronic...

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