Nanomaterials provide a fertile opportunity space for fundamental scientific discoveries and technological advances, but one aspect that has been underestimated by the community is whether the process of becoming a nanoscientist working with these materials influences hairstyles. The cases presented below provide an initial answer to what question. If you have additional data points from your own personal experience, please let us know.
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Recent Highlights
- Daniel’s paper in inkjet printing epitaxially connected nanocrystal superlattices published
- Jessica’s paper on mesocrystal formation methods published in Chemistry of Materials.
- Rileigh’s paper on Pulse Symmetry Impacts the C2 Product Selectivity in Pulsed Electrochemical CO2 Reduction published in ACS Energy Letters
- Rileigh’s review on pulsing electrochemical CO2 reduction is published in Joule
- Rileigh’s paper on Effect of Electrolyte Composition and Concentration is published.
- Jen-Yu’s and Yuanze paper on Processing–Structure–Performance Relationships of Microporous Metal–Organic Polymers for Size-Selective Separations published
- Jen-Yu’s paper (with Tangi Aubert, Wiesner group) on 3D printing in Nature Communications
- Paper on Quantum Dot Dimerization now in ACS Nano
- Pulsing electrochemical CO2 reduction paper published in ACS Catalysis
- Yingjie’s paper on photoinitated transformation of nanocrystal superlattice polymorphs online
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