Lab and Test

HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • A Moldable Scaffold for Bone

    A team, including researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, is developing a new material that can be used to replace skull bone lost to injury, surgery or birth defect.

  • Deep Learning Algorithm Holds Promise for Drug Development

    A type of machine learning that works well with small data sets holds promise for drug discovery and development.

  • Why Car Factories Now Have High-Quality Electron Microscopes

    Powerful electron microscopes are extremely valuable in science laboratories. However, they are used elsewhere as well. For example, SEAT, a Spanish automotive manufacturer, decided to show how this powerful tool is used in the automotive industry.

  • Renewable Plastic Precursor Could Grow Cellulosic Biofuel Industry

    A team of chemical and biological engineers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison has found a way to produce from biomass a valuable compound used in plastic production that they estimate could lower the cost of ethanol produced from plant material by more than two dollars per gallon.

  • Wrapping Sponges in Graphene Nanoribbons Allows for Joule Heating to Help Clean up Oil Spills

    A team of researchers with the University of Science and Technology of China has found a way to make sponges used to clean up oil spills in the ocean work better when soaking up heavy crude oil.

  • Climate Change to Increase Severe Aircraft Turbulence

    The study is the first ever to examine the future of severe turbulence, which causes planes to undergo random up-and-down motions that are stronger than gravity.

  • Innovative Sensor Can Screen Toxic Drugs, Help Develop Biomaterials and Much More

    Researchers at the University of California, Riverside have found an innovative new use for a simple piece of glass tubing: weighing things.

  • Mapping the Origins of Stars and Galaxies

    A powerful telescope capable of mapping the sky at submillimeter and millimeter wavelengths is under development.

  • Test Method Helps Determine Aluminum Alloy Composition

    The method uses inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry to gauge if an alloy’s composition is within the needed limits.

  • Seaweed: From Superfood to Superconductor

    Seaweed, the edible algae with a long history in some Asian cuisines, and which has also become part of the Western foodie culture, could turn out to be an essential ingredient in another trend: the development of more sustainable ways to power our devices.

  • New Research Could Help Speed Up the 3-D Printing Process

    A team of researchers from Binghamton University and MIT have identified some bottlenecks in 3-D printers that, if improved, could speed up the entire process.

  • LED-Based Device Predicts Radiation Skin Damage

    An imaging device might gauge the severity and type of skin damage caused by radiation therapy administered to breast cancer patients.

  • Nitrogen, Phosphorus from Fertilizers and Pet Waste Polluting Urban Water

    Research from the University of Minnesota points to lawn fertilizers and pet waste as the dominant sources of nitrogen and phosphorus pollutants in seven sub-watersheds of the Mississippi River in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

  • UBC Invention Uses Bacteria to Purify Water

    A University of British Columbia-developed system that uses bacteria to turn non-potable water into drinking water will be tested next week in West Vancouver prior to being installed in remote communities in Canada and beyond.

  • Materials May Lead to Self-healing Smartphones

    Researchers at the University of California, Riverside, report that they have developed a self-healing polymeric material with an eye toward electronics and soft robotics that can repair themselves.

  • Stretching the Boundaries of Neural Implants

    Implantable fibers have been an enormous boon to brain research, allowing scientists to stimulate specific targets in the brain and monitor electrical responses. But similar studies in the nerves of the spinal cord, which might ultimately lead to treatments to alleviate spinal cord injuries, have been more difficult to carry out. That's because the spine flexes and stretches as the body moves, and the relatively stiff, brittle fibers used today could damage the delicate spinal cord tissue.

  • Reinventing Metal 3D Printing with New Direct Writing

    Metal 3D printing has enormous potential to revolutionize modern manufacturing. However, the most popular metal printing processes, which use lasers to fuse together fine metal powder, have their limitations.

  • Curbing Coffee Cup Usage

    The use of disposable coffee cups could be reduced by 50-300 million annually according to research announced today by leading coffee roaster Bewley’s.

  • Graphene-Coated Contact Lens Block EM Radiation

    Graphene-coated contact lenses can protect wearers from electromagnetic radiation and dehydration.

  • Autonomous Crack Detection in Nuclear Power Plants

    An advanced algorithm and a powerful machine learning technique to detect cracks based on the changing texture surrounding cracks on steel surfaces.

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