2.5-dimensional materials promise new applications for artificial intelligence, electronics, automobiles and the energy sector.
The compact, lightweight device generates electricity when shaken and can power 100 LEDs.
Researchers are working to overcome challenges in order to bring wearable, electric, wound-healing devices to clinical practice.
Scientists in Korea make hand-drawn and flexible pressure sensors that can control a phone from underwater.
An injection made of a hydrogel containing stem cells could treat damaged tissue following a heart attack.
Magnetic field could boost blood vessel growth to regenerate damaged tissue.
Magnetic layers interact with sunlight differently, creating a temperature gradient that generates electricity day and night.
Neurone-like junctions made of mixed oxide-based materials could reduce the massive energy consumption of artificial intelligence operations.
Devices that can see shortwave infrared light, which is invisible to the naked eye, could soon become cheaper and more accessible to a broader consumer base.
A review on the latest research of the various types of Heusler alloys summarizes the field’s main achievements up to 2020.
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