What if we could copy how plants create their own energy—and use it to power our world? In a study published last week in Nature, researchers say they’ve created a prototype of a device with the ...
The leaf is one of nature’s most impressive little machines, able to convert sunlight, carbon dioxide and water into energy. Scientists at Cambridge have now created a type of artificial leaf that can ...
University of Cambridge researchers have designed ultra-thin, leaf-like devices that produce green hydrogen from water splitting. The floating photoelectrochemical devices showed a 0.58% ...
(Nanowerk News) Researchers have developed floating ‘artificial leaves’ that generate clean fuels from sunlight and water, and could eventually operate on a large scale at sea. The researchers, from ...
At Cambridge University, it’s not uncommon to glance at the River Cam and spot a punt boat crammed with students, or perhaps an emerald-headed mallard floating along the water. A more extraordinary ...
An artificial leaf that uses sunlight to produce ingredients for fuel is light enough to float on water, offering a possible way to address the shortage of land available for capturing solar energy.
Researchers have developed floating ‘artificial leaves’ that generate clean fuels from sunlight and water, and could eventually operate on a large scale at sea. The researchers, from the University of ...
Researchers have developed floating 'artificial leaves' that generate clean fuels from sunlight and water, and could eventually operate on a large scale at sea. Researchers have developed floating ...
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