Tech Xplore on MSN
PFAS-free membrane with nanoscopic plugs enables cleaner, cheaper hydrogen production
Hydrogen is already an important source of energy. The $250 billion industry supports fertilizer production, steel manufacturing, oil refining, and dozens of other vital activities. While nearly all ...
A research team from UNIST has unveiled a novel technology capable of extracting hydrogen (H₂) stored in ammonia (NH₃) by adding silicon (Si), simultaneously producing high-purity H2 and silicon ...
At Columbia Engineering, chemical engineer Dan Esposito and his team are developing an alternative to Nafion. Their work, ...
Researchers from the University of Southern California, University of Massachusetts, University of California Los Angeles, ...
From tiger stripes to leopard spots, the animal world is full of distinctive and intricate patterns. In a new study, CU ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Turning Food Waste Into Jet Fuel for Sustainable Transportation
Learn how turning food waste into sustainable aviation fuel could help the aviation industry meet its ambitions net-zero ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Korean team’s battery breakthrough: New method locks anode materials in just 5 seconds
Korean researchers develop a fast, eco-friendly method boosting lithium battery performance with uniform nanomaterial ...
A Hunan University team published their findings in the journal Energy Fuels (DOI: ), proposing that spin-state engineering of cobalt-based catalysts can optimize ammonia decomposition for hydrogen ...
After a summer in the MIT Delta V accelerator, student entrepreneurs presented their startups to a capacity crowd at Demo Day ...
Writing this week in Nature Communications, the agricultural engineers outlined a strategy for taking excess food waste, converting it into biofuel, and then “upgrading” that fuel into jet fuel that ...
A team of researchers has explored how two-dimensional materials known as MXenes could revolutionize renewable energy and sustainable chemical production. Scientists searching for cleaner and more sus ...
ZME Science on MSN
Scientists Just Found a Way to Spin Leftover Yeast From Beer Into Soft, Strong, Biodegradable Fabric
Penn State researchers say the stuff we throw away after making beer, wine, and even some medicines could help feed people ...
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