Electrode’s ‘hot edges’ convert CO₂ gas into fuels and chemicals
Published on 15 May 2019The bowl-shaped design can efficiently convert CO₂ from gas into carbon based fuels and chemicals, helping combat the threat of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
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The bowl-shaped design can efficiently convert CO₂ from gas into carbon based fuels and chemicals, helping combat the threat of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Professor Knight is among a prestigious list of 50 eminent scientists to have been announced as Fellows and Foreign Members of the Royal Society.
Physicists have developed a flexible way to synthesise a wide range of novel nanomaterials with potential applications in areas including optics and sensors.
Scientists at the University of Bath have levitated particles using sound in an experiment which could have applications in so-called “soft robotics”.
The discovery could lead to advancements in diverse fields including chemical manufacturing, pharmaceuticals and miniaturisation.
An international team of researchers find evidence for much theorised ‘hot cocoon’
New research involving Bath physicists could lead to the design of new materials to help improve the performance of perovskite solar cells (PSCs).
Physicists from Bath have developed a new type of sensor platform using a gold nanoparticle array, that's 100 times more sensitive than current similar sensors.
Bath astrophysicists are part of an international consortium working on the largest and most sensitive telescope in the world
The University will lead a network of 12 EU universities and companies to train new researchers in the area of optical frequency combs in microresonators.