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Drinkable seawater.

Around 10% of the world’s population lack a clean source of drinking water. The Korea Institute Of Civil Engineering and Building Technology has developed an electrospun nanofiber membrane to turn seawater into drinking water through a membrane distillation process in just a few minutes.

Their device is described in the Journal of Membrane Science: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0376738820316008?via%3Dihub

#sciencenews #nanomaterials
Nano-cleaners.

University of Colorado Boulder researchers have found that tiny, self-propelled particles can swim to escape from mazes as much as 20 times faster than passive particles, paving the way for their use in cleaning waste from hard to reach areas.

Their nanosystem is described in PNAS: http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2101807118
#sciencenews #nanomaterials #environment
Fast nanographene synthesis.

A group of researchers at Nagoya University, Japan have developed a new method for quickly and efficiently synthesising nanographenes. They used an APEX reaction with polycyclic aromatic templates to controllably synthesise a range of different nanographenes.

Their work has been published in Nature Communications: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24261-y
#sciencenews #nanomaterials
Sheer Perfection.

A research team at UC Berkeley has developed a nanoparticle composite that grows into 3D crystals. The 3D polymer-grafted nanoparticles could lead to new technologies that are 3D-grown rather than 3D-printed.

Their work has been published in Nature Communications: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22950-2
#sciencenews #nanomaterials