Loading...
ScienceDaily: Matter & Energy News |
Wearable sensors detect what's in your sweat Posted: 16 Aug 2019 04:14 PM PDT A team of scientists is developing wearable skin sensors that can detect what's in your sweat. In a new article, the team describes a sensor design that can be rapidly manufactured using a ''roll-to-roll'' processing technique that essentially prints the sensors onto a sheet of plastic like words on a newspaper. The sensors can provide real-time measurements of sweat rate, and electrolytes and metabolites in sweat. |
Superconductors: Unraveling the stripe order mystery Posted: 16 Aug 2019 04:14 PM PDT Researchers have shed new light on how superconductivity and charge order can exist adjacent to one another. |
Unlocking the nanoscale world on standard biology lab equipment Posted: 16 Aug 2019 04:55 AM PDT Standard optical microscopes can image cells and bacteria but not their nanoscale features which are blurred by a physical effect called diffraction. Now, researchers report a simple way to bypass diffraction limitations using standard optical imaging tools. |
Optofluidic chip with nanopore 'smart gate' developed for single molecule analysis Posted: 16 Aug 2019 04:55 AM PDT A new chip-based platform integrates nanopores and optofluidic technology with a feedback-control circuit to enable an unprecedented level of control over individual molecules and particles on a chip for high-throughput analysis. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Matter & Energy News -- ScienceDaily. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
Loading...
Loading...