MXene is a two-dimensional nanomaterial with alternating layers of metal and carbon that exhibits strong electrical conductivity and may be mixed with different metal compounds. As a result, it can be used in a variety of sectors, including semiconductors, electronic devices, and sensors.
Mohamed Ibrahim Al Hammadi, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of ENEC, was featured on a panel session with Sama Leon, Director-General of the World Nuclear Association (WNA) and John Wagner, Laboratory Director at the Idaho National Laboratory (INL), US, moderated by Jennifer Go
A new study demonstrated the isolation and sequencing of RNA molecules from a Tasmanian tiger specimen kept at room temperature in a museum collection over a century ago.
The therapy, tested in mouse models, combines a delivery system that targets cancer cells with a specially modified version of microRNA-34a, a molecule that acts “like the brakes on a car,” slowing or stopping cell division, said Andrea Kasinski, lead author and the William and Patty Miller
Tumour cells are known to be fickle sleepers, typically lying dormant in distant tissues for years before reactivating and producing metastasis. Numerous elements, ranging from cells and molecules to other components in the so-called tissue microenvironment, have been researched to determine
Researchers at the Burke Neurological Institute and Weill Cornell Medicine have completed a preclinical investigation on a non-opioid designer molecule that calms hyperactive pain-sensing neurons in the peripheral nervous system to treat chronic neuropathic pain. The results of the study are
Understanding and maximising the characteristics of proton conducting materials depend greatly on how water molecules behave in these materials. To detect changes in the speed of the water, it is necessary to be able to look at extremely quick pictures. Semiclathrate hydrate crystals have be
Carbon-based materials have several amazing properties that make them appealing as catalysts for accelerating chemical reactions. They are low-cost and lightweight, and their large surface area provides a useful scaffold for anchoring catalysts, keeping them stable and scattered far apart wh
Carbon-based materials have a number of properties that make them appealing as catalysts for accelerating chemical reactions. They are low-cost and lightweight, and their large surface area provides a useful scaffold for anchoring catalysts, keeping them stable and scattered far apart while