Home > News > Nanoflowers blossom in place of nanotubes
April 11th, 2003
Nanoflowers blossom in place of nanotubes
Abstract: Scientists at the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan have made nanoflowers of molybdenum sulphide (MoS2). The flowers contained tens to hundreds of petals several nanometres thick and were excellent field emitters.
Source:Nanotechweb
Bookmark:
Discoveries
Beautiful "flowers" self-assemble in a beaker: Elaborate nanostructures blossom from a chemical reaction perfected at Harvard May 17th, 2013
Artificial Forest for Solar Water-Splitting: Berkeley Lab Researchers Report First Fully Integrated Artificial Photosynthesis Nanosystem May 17th, 2013
Moth-Inspired Nanostructures Take the Color Out of Thin Films May 17th, 2013
Scientists capture first direct proof of Hofstadter butterfly effect May 17th, 2013