The discovery of unprecedented, non-native phases of transition metal oxides is a fascinating theme in materials chemistry, including the development of new synthetic strategies with excellent size- ...
MIT researchers found that metals retain hidden atomic patterns once believed to vanish during manufacturing. These patterns ...
The process of heat-treating metals on the industrial scale primarily serves to improve the overall properties of the metals required for their future use. Such metal properties can include toughness, ...
Scientists at EPFL have reimagined 3D printing by turning simple hydrogels into tough metals and ceramics. Their process ...
Ferrous metals contain iron, are strong and magnetic, and are used in construction, car manufacturing, and machinery parts. Non-ferrous metals do not contain iron, are resistant to rust, and are used ...
Last month, Brown professor of physics James Valles and a group of collaborators from various Chinese research institutions published a study looking at a class of materials that do not follow ...
CBSE 2024-25 Competency-Based Questions With Answers: The CBSE Class 10 Science chapter on Metals and Non-Metals introduces students to the physical and chemical properties of metals and non-metals, ...
An international research team led by the University of Bayreuth has discovered a metal that combines electrical conductivity with internal polarity. This enables it to exhibit second harmonic ...
For decades, it's been known that subtle chemical patterns exist in metal alloys, but researchers thought they were too minor to matter—or that they got erased during manufacturing. However, recent ...
The field of metal toxicology is vast, and although a wealth of information exists to account for bacterial resistance mechanisms towards metals, much less is known about the molecular and cellular ...
"Being able to generate magnetism in materials that are not naturally magnetic opens new paths to devices that use abundant and hazardless elements, such as carbon and copper," says postgraduate ...
Welcome to science world. See this guy? This is Dmitri Mendeleev. 150 years ago in Russia this guy invented a way of arranging the elements according to their atomic weights, in a matrix. So cool.