From jewelry and kitchen utensils to door handles and hand tools, metals can be found in a variety of everyday items — and for some people, exposure to these objects can trigger an allergic reaction.
Speeding up chemical reactions is key to improving industrial processes or mitigating unwanted or harmful waste. Realizing these improvements requires that chemists design around documented reaction ...
Over the years, we’ve had the pleasure of going out into the real world to touch some grass, fire up the ol’ camera, and get some in-person reactions to some of today’s more extreme metal bands.
Researchers from Osaka University and collaborating partners have developed an economical catalyst for an important chemical transformation, which might inspire additional efforts at lowering costs in ...
Scientists have mapped the atomic interactions that make nanoscale catalysts so effective at converting propane into propylene. The discovery highlights a stabilizing oxide pattern that could guide ...
Scientists developed a high-performance hydrogen-production catalyst using lignin, a common waste product from paper and ...
Patients with "metal on metal" (MoM) artificial hips are at risk of complications caused by adverse reactions to metal debris (ARMD). A study in the September 20, 2017 issue of The Journal of Bone & ...
A team of scientists in Chile and Spain has developed an innovative electrocatalyst made from hazelnut shell biochar that ...
A new study showcases a catalyst made from lignin, a plant-based waste material, that dramatically improves a key step in ...