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Thijs Versloot

New polymers could provide breakthrough in li-ion batteries - 0 views

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    DeSimone and his team have been working with PFPE for years, and during their research, the crew found that another polymer electrolyte, polyethylen glycol or PEG, and PFPE could combine to dissolve salt, and potentially function as an electrolyte. When his team attached the PFPE to dimethyl carbonate, an electrolyte traditionally used in batteries, the resulting PFPE-DMC was a polymer that could move a battery's ions with insane levels of efficiency while remaining stable.
Athanasia Nikolaou

Polymer scientists jam nanoparticles, trapping liquids in useful shapes - 1 views

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    Inserting a droplet of polymer enriched water into oil and manipulating its shape by applying an electric field. The shape remains intact after cease of the forcing. <br /> "Russell (...) points out that the advance holds promise for a wide range of different applications including in drug delivery, biosensing, fluidics, photovoltaics, encapsulation and bicontinuous media for energy applications and separations media."
Beniamino Abis

Self-healing plastic that regenerates mimicking blood clots - 1 views

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    A vascular synthetic system that restores mechanical performance in response to large-scale damage. Gap-filling scaffolds are created through a two-stage polymer chemistry that initially forms a shape-conforming dynamic gel but later polymerizes to a solid structural polymer with robust mechanical properties.
Juxi Leitner

Rapid design and manufacture of novel micro-devices - 0 views

  • Starting with a commercial micro-fluidics polymer prototyping kit (from ThinXXS), the project successfully developed a 'template' polymer system into which silicon components can be simply 'plugged in'.
ESA ACT

Printable robots - 0 views

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    and electro-actuated polymers, EAP, (synthetic muscles).
Nina Nadine Ridder

Material could harvest sunlight by day, release heat on demand hours or days later - 5 views

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    Imagine if your clothing could, on demand, release just enough heat to keep you warm and cozy, allowing you to dial back on your thermostat settings and stay comfortable in a cooler room. Or, picture a car windshield that stores the sun's energy and then releases it as a burst of heat to melt away a layer of ice.
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    interesting indeed: Such chemically-based storage materials, known as solar thermal fuels (STF), have been developed before, including in previous work by Grossman and his team. But those earlier efforts "had limited utility in solid-state applications" because they were designed to be used in liquid solutions and not capable of making durable solid-state films, Zhitomirsky says. The new approach is the first based on a solid-state material, in this case a polymer, and the first based on inexpensive materials and widespread manufacturing technology. Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-01-material-harvest-sunlight-day-demand.html#jCp
LeopoldS

Spider silk self-assembly via modular liquid-liquid phase separation and nanofibrillati... - 0 views

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    beautiful research, and fascinating how fast these polymers seem to self assemble at exit ...
johannessimon81

New Supergel Has Strange Biological Properties - 0 views

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    Linked to the discussion we had last week on elastically non-linear polymers. The inverted liquid->solid phase transition might be interesting and the material might be self-healing just above the transition.
jcunha

Engineered 'sand' may help cool electronic devices - 0 views

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    Baratunde Cola would like to put sand into your computer. Not beach sand, but silicon dioxide nanoparticles coated with a high dielectric constant polymer to inexpensively provide improved cooling for increasingly power-hungry electronic devices. The silicon dioxide doesn't do the cooling itself.
Thijs Versloot

Shapeshift electroactive polymers - 3 views

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    Not very new, but interesting stuff, maybe related to space suits or unfolding techniques of solar panels (which unfold as they are irradiated?)
dejanpetkow

Polymers with very strong Piezoelectric effect discovered - 0 views

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    Harvesting vibrational energy?
ESA ACT

Ultrastrong and Stiff Layered Polymer Nanocomposites -- Podsiadlo et al. 318 (5847): 80... - 0 views

shared by ESA ACT on 24 Apr 09 - Cached
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    Imitating bio-composites (enamel, cuticula,...) could become feasible with nanotechnology.
ESA ACT

Nanotechnology: Squaring up with polymers : Article : Nature - 0 views

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    Another nature article which caught my interest today.
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