New Process Makes Heat-Harvesting Materials Cheaply
Such materials could be used to cool computers and buildings, and harvest waste heat in cars. Source: Technology Review - Discipline: Technology...
Source: LabSpaces - Wednesday, 18 January
Related articles:
- Less than a day ago
- 1Vote! Space Harvesting of Antimatter Might Fuel Starships
LabSpaces - Yesterday
- Less than a few days ago
- 3Vote! Bio Computer
Hacked Gadgets - 3 days ago
- Older News
- 4Vote! Hack a Carabiner with Heat Shrink Tubing to Build the Ultimate Keychain
Lifehacker - Wednesday, 16 May
- 4Vote! Nanocrystal infrared LEDs can be made cheaply
PhysOrg - Thursday, 10 May
- 3Vote! Mining for heat
PhysOrg - Wednesday, 2 May
- 5Vote! With new design, bulk semiconductor proves it can take the heat
PhysOrg - Wednesday, 25 April
- 4Vote! New harvesting approach boosts energy output from bacteria
PhysOrg - Wednesday, 25 April
- 6Vote! Controlling heat flow with atomic-level precision
PhysOrg - Sunday, 22 April
- 5Vote! Gray Matter: Want a Chemical Reaction Without Heat? Add a Catalyst
PopSci.com - DIY - Wednesday, 18 April
- 4Vote! Hot new manufacturing tool: A temperature-controlled microbe
PhysOrg - Tuesday, 17 April
- 1Vote! New design for nanoparticles that absorb low-energy light, emit high-energy light may find use in biological imaging
PhysOrg - Thursday, 12 April
- 3Vote! New method offers control of strain on graphene membranes
PhysOrg - Monday, 2 April
- 4Vote! Simple, cheap way to mass-produce graphene nanosheets
LabSpaces - Tuesday, 27 March
- 4Vote! Researchers find simple and cheap way to mass-produce graphene nanosheets
PhysOrg - Monday, 26 March
- 3Vote! To nab wasted heat, solid mimics liquid
Futurity.org - Monday, 26 March
- 5Vote! Device for harvesting energy and water from human waste gets green light
PhysOrg - Thursday, 15 March
- 3Vote! Carbonised red mud can treat water cheaply
SciDev.Net - Thursday, 15 March - 8Vote! Phase transition in trillionth-of-a-second intervals
Futurity.org - Friday, 9 March
- 4Vote! Scientists develop new way to shape thin gel sheets
LabSpaces - Friday, 9 March
- 5Vote! Spider silk conducts heat better than silicon
Futurity.org - Tuesday, 6 March