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Chemistry World May 30, 2012 Jon Cartwright |
Tiny buckyball grown around metal atom An international team of researchers has observed the smallest fullerene to form spontaneously to date using metal atoms for stabilization. |
The Motley Fool January 23, 2006 Stephen D. Simpson |
Got Titanium? Carpenter Does. Specialty alloys are a growing segment of the metal market, and Carpenter is right there in the thick of it. The trick, of course, is figuring out how much is left in the stock price. |
Reactive Reports Issue 30 David Bradley |
Alloys spring to mind Alloys that 'remember' their original shape after being deformed and revert to it on heating are widely used in many diverse applications. Now, researchers have deposited a range of Ni-Mn-Ga alloys with different compositions simultaneously on to silicon substrates. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2002 Tonya Vinas |
Technologies Of The Year -- LiquidMetal Alloys Innovative material is stronger than titanium but can be formed like a plastic. |
Technology Research News August 25, 2004 |
Method Makes Stronger Steel Researchers have found a way to cast relatively large structures from a type of steel whose atomic structure is amorphous, like glass, rather than the usual orderly crystalline structure of metal. |
Chemistry World February 17, 2015 Matthew Gunther |
Microscope pinpoints atoms in a lattice The imaging method, a modified form of a scanning transmission electron microscope, may help researchers to understand how chemical bonding and lattice distortions can affect the performance of alloys. |
National Defense February 2010 Jean & Wright |
New Break Drum Could Trim Pounds from Stryker Vehicles Developers are showcasing an aluminum break drum for trucks that weighs nearly half as much as its cast-iron equivalent. |
Chemistry World July 2, 2014 Victoria Richards |
Molecular brass Brass has been known to man since prehistoric times; now scientists in Germany have isolated the first molecular example of the copper -- zinc alloy. |
InternetNews August 3, 2010 |
Tech Firms Split on Paying for Security Flaws Some major IT firms have made it a standard practice to pay security researchers for bringing vulnerabilities to their attention, while others have a strict prohibition against it. What accounts for the divide? |
The Motley Fool May 12, 2004 Mike Cianciolo |
Toyota Smokes the Competition The leader of the Japanese auto market sets a list of records. |
Chemistry World December 15, 2010 Hayley Birch |
New technique probes electron properties of individual atoms A new, low voltage electron microscopy technique allows scientists to discriminate not just between atoms of different elements but between atoms of the same element in different electronic states. |
Wired October 2001 Wil McCarthy |
Ultimate Alchemy Research into artificial atoms could lead to one startling endpoint: programmable matter that changes its makeup at the flip of a switch... |