Results 181 to 190 of about 399,713 (330)
Fluorine‐Free Soft Nanocomposites for High‐Speed Liquid Impact Repellence
Fluorine‐free soft nanocomposite coatings are developed using silicone oil‐mediated mechanical‐stiffness control, enabling ‘dry’ liquid‐repellent surfaces that resist high‐speed water jet impacts up to ∼60 m/s. By tuning nanoparticle loading and oil content, the coatings also achieve >90% optical transparency, amphiphobicity with impact resistance to ...
Priya Mandal +4 more
wiley +1 more source
The Cu\u3csub\u3eA\u3c/sub\u3e Center of a Soluble Domain from \u3cem\u3eThermus\u3c/em\u3e cytochrome ba\u3csub\u3e3\u3c/sub\u3e. An NMR Investigation of the Paramagnetic Protein. A Proton NMR Study of the Paramagnetic Active Site of the Cu\u3csub\u3eA\u3c/sub\u3e Variant of Amicyanin [PDF]
Holz, Richard C.
core +1 more source
Applying a high electric field to a doped organic semiconductor heats up the charge carrier distribution beyond the lattice temperature, enhancing conductivity. It is shown that the associated effective temperature can be used to extract the effective localization length, which is a characteristic length scale of charge transport and provides ...
Morteza Shokrani +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Mössbauer Effect of Fe⁵⁷ in Fe(OH)₂ (Physical and Inorganic Chemistry)
Hiroki Miyamoto +3 more
openalex +1 more source
Reducing power consumption in spintronic memory remains a major challenge due to the need for high current densities. A bilayer of gadolinium and holmium iron garnets enables purely temperature‐induced, nonvolatile magnetic switching with bistable states within a ±25 K range. This approach achieves up to 66‐fold lower energy use than current spin–orbit
Junseok Kim +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Synthetic soils for ecological and synthetic biology applications. [PDF]
Orebaugh J +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Chemical Engineering Division physical inorganic chemistry semiannual report, July--December 1972.
M. Blander +8 more
openalex +2 more sources
Sustainable Catalyst‐Free PLG Networks: Recyclability, Biodegradability, and Functional Performance
A catalyst‐additive free covalent adaptable network is developed from star‐shaped poly(lactide‐co‐glycolide) cross‐linked with pyromellitic dianhydride, enabling internal carboxylic acid‐driven transesterification. The resulting biodegradable network exhibits mechanical robustness (Young's modulus ≈1.6 GPa), complete recyclability, rapid biodegradation
Lars Schwarzer +2 more
wiley +1 more source

