Materials Chemistry

Macromolecular and materials chemistry explores the synthesis, architecture and function of large molecular assemblies and composite systems. By controlling monomer composition, polymerisation ...

Materials Chemistry 1

TechAnnouncer: Understanding the Journal of Materials Chemistry A Abbreviation: A Comprehensive Guide

Understanding The Journal Of Materials Chemistry A Abbreviation So, you’re looking at publishing your latest materials science ...

Designing molecules is one of chemistry's most complex challenges. From life-saving drugs to advanced materials, each compound requires a precise sequence of reactions. Planning these steps demands ...

Materials Chemistry 4

Journalism in the Americas: Bridging Chemistry and Physics on the Path to New Materials

Polymer chemistry is transforming industries, from sustainable materials to biomedicine. Over his decades as a professor of materials, chemistry and biochemistry at UC Santa Barbara, Craig Hawker’s ...

Azides are chemical compounds widely used in synthetic organic chemistry, pharmaceutical sciences, and materials chemistry. However, conventional synthesis methods for azide compounds have severe ...

Materials Chemistry 7

And for materials, the information can be much more complex than just “snow” or “no snow.” For materials, that means many of the same things Jim Warren talked about with his steel samples: the list of ingredients, the manufacturing process, “that is, the soufflé recipe,” Warren says.

Materials Chemistry 8

NIST develops testbeds, defines benchmarks and develops formability measurements and models for a variety of emerging materials.

Materials Chemistry 9

NIST researchers have found special atomic patterns called quasicrystals in 3D-printed aluminum alloys. Quasicrystals increase the strength of 3D-printed aluminum, the researchers discovered, making it possible to use in lightweight, high-strength objects such as airplane parts. Once thought impossible, quasicrystals were originally discovered at NIST, leading to a 2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.