Researchers in the US have used quantum chemistry to explain why ozone catalysts degrade during water electrolysis.
A class taught by chemist Li-Qiong Wang teaches the molecular building blocks of artistic expression and enables students to make some art of their own along the way.
“Cooking is art—but baking is science,” Bill Nye the Science Guy once said. While a batch of freshly baked chocolate chip ...
Megha Pritesh Asher, co-founder of Juicy Chemistry, was honoured at Digital Women Awards for building India’s leading ...
OpenAI’s new FrontierScience benchmark shows AI advancing in physics, chemistry, and biology—and exposes the challenge of ...
Researchers at IIT-Madras are running a machine that simulates Delhi’s pollution chemistry under controlled and accelerated ...
Long before perovskite solar cells began smashing efficiency records and transforming the future of clean energy, their ...
From a particle smasher encircling the moon to an “impossible” laser, five scientists reveal the experiments they would run ...
An octopus's mesmerizing skin can flit from orange to red in the blink of an eye, partly thanks to a natural pigment called ...
Whether it's Greek ouzo, French pastis or Turkish raki, when these spirits are diluted with water, the mixture becomes cloudy ...
The UK's National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) is on the lookout for some very clever people to put Google's Willow ...
More than a decade ago, Northwestern chemists and materials scientists reported in Nature the first solid-state solar cell based on a halide perovskite semiconductor — an advance that ultimately ...