What if your next electric car's body was also its battery?That's the bold claim from this Icelandic startup.By R. Baldwin, 04.02.2021
Researchers create '2D' gold a million times thinner than a fingernailThe material could have a major impact on nano technologies.By R. England, 08.06.2019
A nanoparticle-coated skin patch could treat obesity and diabetesIt reduced fat stores in obese mice and increased their metabolic activity.By M. Locklear, 09.15.2017
Nanoparticles fool your body into allowing organ transplantsYour body can't reject what it doesn't detect.By J. Fingas, 08.06.2017
Sony and IBM created 330TB data tapes for a massive analog archiveThat's 201 gigabytes of data per square inch. By T. Seppala, 08.02.2017
Scientists map every atom inside a nanoparticleThe trick could help spot the tiniest defects in materials.By J. Fingas, 02.06.2017
Simple breath test can detect cancer and 16 other diseasesUsing gold nanoparticles and AI, a device correctly diagnosed 86 percent of patients.By S. Dent, 12.29.2016
ICYMI: Skyjumping science experiments and moreScientists wanted to see what nanoparticles would do in low-gravity, so they jumped from a plane.By K. Davis, 07.08.2016
Scientists use nanoparticles to crush lingering fat cellsThe treatment uses powerful drugs to beat obesity, while limiting side effects. By S. Dent, 05.03.2016
Scientists write with nanoparticles using a laser and a bubbleResearchers at the University of Texas call the new technique 'bubble-pen lithography.'By J. Conditt, 01.18.2016
Light-triggered nanoparticles kill drug-resistant bacteriaThe threat of 'superbugs' may be cured by something very, very small.By J. Fingas, 01.18.2016
Nanoparticle-based windows could switch colors on demandThe same materials inside stained glass windows could lead to color-changing windows.By J. Fingas, 12.14.2015