Tech Xplore on MSN
A heatshield for 'never-wet' surfaces: Engineers repel even near-boiling water with low-cost, scalable coating
Superhydrophobic surfaces—those famously "never-wet" materials that make water bead up and roll away—have a stubborn weakness: hot water. Once temperatures climb above roughly 40 degrees Celsius, many ...
Microsoft Researchers Figure Out How to Store Data Inside Glass Using Lasers ...
Viral slow cooker seed hacks promise faster germination on a shoestring; see how they compare with safer UK‑friendly methods before risking your seeds.
Solid-state batteries promise greater safety, higher energy density, and new degrees of freedom in cell design. Yet the path from laboratory cell to industrial production is challenging. Laser ...
Superhydrophobic materials—often called “never-wet” surfaces—are famous for making water bead up and roll away. They are used ...
In many quantum materials—materials with unusual electrical and magnetic properties driven by quantum mechanical effects—electrons can organize themselves into Landau levels. Landau levels are ...
Some solid materials can cool down or heat up when pressure is applied or released. This behavior enables cooling and heating ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US lab scales nuclear testing to 1,340°F to advance next-gen reactor efficiency
Researchers at the US Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory have unveiled a breakthrough ...
Thermal engineering research has increasingly focused on innovative system design and optimization to address global challenges in energy efficiency, ...
By freezing a crucial phosphoric acid complex to near absolute zero, scientists uncovered a single, unexpectedly stable structure at the heart of proton transport.
Transcript: Building America: Powering the AI Age ...
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