Podcast: Big Material Breakthroughs At The Small Scale
In this episode, we talk about how a breakthrough from the University of Cambridge in the design of electrodes has enabled significant increase in renewable energy from photosynthetic bacteria and a Texas A&M grant to kickstart the research towards scalable nanomanufacturing.
The team has established a new in-house, spray-deposition manufacturing technique that uses supercritical carbon dioxide to assist the atomization and create very fine and uniform micron-size droplets containing nanoparticles. | Image: Courtesy of Dr. Dorrin Jarrahbashi
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In this episode, we talk about how a breakthrough from the University of Cambridge in the design of electrodes has enabled significant increase in renewable energy from photosynthetic bacteria and a Texas A&M grant to kickstart the research towards scalable nanomanufacturing. As always, you can find these and other interesting & impactful engineering articles on Wevolver.com.
This podcast is sponsored by Mouser Electronics.
EPISODE NOTES
(0:57) - Tiny ‘Skyscrapers’ Help Bacteria With Photosynthesis
(12:37) - New Manufacturing Technique For 3D Nanostructures
About the podcast:
Every day, some of the most innovative universities, companies, and individual technology developers share their knowledge on Wevolver. To ensure we can also provide this knowledge for the growing group of podcast listeners, we started a collaboration with two young engineers, Daniel Scott Mitchell & Farbod Moghaddam who discuss the most interesting content in this podcast series.
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