Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory induced a two-dimensional material to cannibalize itself for atomic “building blocks” from which stable structures formed.
Filter News
Area of Research
- (-) Materials (132)
- Advanced Manufacturing (1)
- Biology and Environment (6)
- Clean Energy (33)
- Computational Biology (1)
- Computer Science (1)
- Electricity and Smart Grid (1)
- Energy Frontier Research Centers (2)
- Fossil Energy (1)
- Functional Materials for Energy (1)
- Fusion and Fission (1)
- Materials Characterization (2)
- Materials for Computing (17)
- National Security (1)
- Neutron Science (21)
- Quantum information Science (1)
- Supercomputing (32)
News Type
Sergei Kalinin of the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory knows that seeing something is not the same as understanding it.
A new microscopy technique developed at the University of Illinois at Chicago allows researchers to visualize liquids at the nanoscale level — about 10 times more resolution than with traditional transmission electron microscopy — for the first time.
An Oak Ridge National Laboratory–led team has learned how to engineer tiny pores embellished with distinct edge structures inside atomically-thin two-dimensional, or 2D, crystals.
Zili Wu of the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory grew up on a farm in China’s heartland. He chose to leave it to catalyze a career in chemistry.
A scientific team led by the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has found a new way to take the local temperature of a material from an area about a billionth of a meter wide, or approximately 100,000 times thinner than a human hair.