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Results 891 - 900 of 1096 for Controlled drug delivery
  • News - 30 Oct 2007
    A magnetic separation technique developed by researchers at Duke University's Pratt School of Engineering and Purdue University makes it relatively simple to sort through beads hundreds of times...
  • Article - 18 Sep 2018
    In fast developing area of technology, key developments are often hard to define however influential they are, in this article some of the key developments are touched on and why they are so important...
  • Article - 29 Jun 2018
    The field of DNA nanotechnology was invented by American nanotechnologist and crystallographer Nadrian C. Seeman – also known as Ned – in the early 1980s. Seeman realised that a three-dimensional...
  • Article - 18 Apr 2018
    Nanochemistry unites – unsurprisingly – nanoscience and chemistry, exploring the new rules of behavior that emerge on the nanoscale.
  • News - 1 Aug 2007
    After binding DNA segments to tiny iron-containing spheres called nanoparticles, researchers have used magnetic fields to direct the nanoparticles into arterial muscle cells, where the DNA could have...
  • News - 19 Jul 2007
    Geckos are remarkable in their ability to scurry up vertical surfaces and even move along upside down. Their feet stick but only temporarily, coming off of surfaces again and again like a sticky note....
  • Article - 10 Mar 2017
    Any type of altered biological state, such as what occurs in the incidence of cancer and infectious diseases, can be detected and monitored by understanding how the specific cells are functioning over...
  • Article - 5 Oct 2015
    Nanoscale materials, in the form of nanoparticles, are playing an important and growing role across a range of different applications and industries which seek to exploit the unique properties...
  • Article - 2 Jul 2015
    In the food industry, nanotechnology has been utilized in order to enhance the delivery of food ingredients to target sites, increase flavor, inhibit bacterial growth, extend product shelf life and...
  • News - 27 Mar 2007
    Researchers in Japan have developed a pair of molecular-scale scissors that open and close in response to light. The tiny scissors are the first example of a molecular machine capable of mechanically...

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