Interesting Engineering on MSN
Graphene material that folds, moves, and senses could power next-gen soft robots
McGill University engineers have developed ultra-thin materials that can move, fold, and reshape themselves, ...
Graphene has many fantastic properties that could change the course of human civilization. It's chemically stable, highly conductive, and incredibly strong. One thing it is not, however, is magnetic.
The "wonder material" known as graphene continues to prove its merits in unexpected ways as scientists and engineers experiment with new applications. In an accidental discovery at Stanford, graphene ...
McGill University engineers have developed new ultra-thin materials that can be programmed to move, fold and reshape themselves, much like animated ...
Hierarchical magnetic graphene–SiCN aerogels were constructed via a stepwise confinement strategy, in which ZIF-derived magnetic nanoparticles and a polysilazane-derived SiCN ceramic layer were ...
Artist’s impression of the quantum spin Hall effect in a graphene-based spintronic device, integrated in a chip. The blue and red spheres are spin-up and spin-down electrons traveling along the edge ...
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