Results 221 to 230 of about 1,990,834 (349)
Grain Boundary Space Charge Engineering of Solid Oxide Electrolytes: Model Thin Film Study
This study demonstrates unprecedented control of grain boundary electrical properties in solid electrolytes. Selective diffusion of cations through grain boundaries in thin films enables 12 orders of magnitude variation in ionic resistance, proving that systematic chemical modification of grain boundary electrical properties is feasible.
Thomas Defferriere +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Charge‐Induced Morphing Gels for Bioinspired Actuation
This study introduces a novel electroactive actuation mechanism that enables the gel material to generate substantial and reversible shape‐changing while preserving topological and isochoric (volumetric) equivalence. The resultant morphing behaviors can mimic the movements of muscle‐driven organelles in nature, including cilia‐like beating and ...
Ciqun Xu +4 more
wiley +1 more source
The Effects of Angular Velocity and Training Status on the Dynamic Control Equilibrium. [PDF]
Alt T, Knicker A, Strueder H.
europepmc +1 more source
An innovative combination of size‐controlled template synthesis, partial cation exchange reactions, and dual shell passivation offers a new class of RoHS‐compliant, heavy metal‐free Cu‐Zn‐In‐Se/ZnS/Al2O3 core/shell/shell quantum dots (QDs), exhibiting long‐range tunability, highly efficient SWIR emission with remarkably narrow photoluminescence ...
Avijit Saha +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Wafer‐Scale Synthesis of Mithrene and its Application in UV Photodetectors
A controlled tarnishing step on the silver surface precedes the solid‐vapor‐phase chemical transformation into silver phenylselenolate thin films. The approach yields crystals exceeding 1 µm with improved in‐plane orientation. Integration on graphene phototransistors demonstrates high photoresponsivity, positioning mithrene as a promising material for ...
Maryam Mohammadi +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Robust Bio‐Textiles Via Mycelium‐Cellulose Interface Engineering
This work introduces a new class of sustainable textiles by growing mycelium, the root‐like structure of fungi, into cellulose‐based fabrics. This semi‐interpenetrating mycelium‐cellulose fiber network combines the strength and breathability of natural fibers with the water‐resistant and adhesive properties of mycelium, resulting in a robust, scalable,
Wenhui Xu +7 more
wiley +1 more source

