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Feb 11, 2024

Redefining Helmet Safety: Scientists Develop New Material That Absorbs Six Times More Energy

Posted by in categories: energy, materials

Football players (and anyone else who takes hard hits) may want to breathe a sigh of relief.

In recent research, engineers at the University of Colorado of Boulder and Sandia National Laboratories have developed a new design for padding that can withstand big impacts. The team’s innovations, which can be printed on commercially available 3D printers, could one day wind up in everything from shipping crates to football pads—anything that helps to protect fragile objects, or bodies, from the bumps of life.

Continue reading “Redefining Helmet Safety: Scientists Develop New Material That Absorbs Six Times More Energy” »

Feb 11, 2024

Minesto’s first megawatt-scale tidal kite powerplant begins production

Posted by in category: energy

Minesto aims to offer clean, dependable, and cost-effective ocean-based power solutions through its Dragon-class tidal power plants.

Feb 10, 2024

Scientists develop new molecular system made from abundant element manganese for photooxidation

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy

Highly reducing or oxidizing photocatalysts are a fundamental challenge in photochemistry. Only a few transition metal complexes with Earth-abundant metal ions have so far advanced to excited state oxidants, including chromium, iron, and cobalt. All these photocatalysts require high energy light for excitation and their oxidizing power has not yet been fully exploited. Furthermore, precious and hence expensive metals are the decisive ingredients in most cases.

A team of researchers headed by Professor Katja Heinze of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) has now developed a new molecular system based on the element manganese. Manganese, as opposed to , is the third most abundant metal after iron and titanium and hence widely available and very cheap. The study is published in the journal Nature Chemistry.

Feb 10, 2024

Magnitude 5.7 earthquake hits Mauna Loa volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island

Posted by in category: energy

A magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck the world’s largest active volcano on Friday — Mauna Loa on the Big Island of Hawaii — knocking items off shelves and cutting power in a nearby town but not immediately prompting reports of serious damage.

The earthquake, which didn’t cause a tsunami and which the U.S. Geological Survey initially reported as magnitude 6.3, was centered on Mauna Loa’s southern flank at a depth of 23 miles, 1.3 miles southwest of Pahala.

Feb 10, 2024

Hydrogen Fuel Cell Is Revving Up: BMW and Toyota Lead The Way to Zero-Emission Vehicles

Posted by in categories: energy, transportation

Discover how BMW and Toyota are accelerating the shift to hydrogen-powered vehicles, revolutionizing the automotive industry.

Feb 9, 2024

A Fusion Reaction Generated Twice the Energy It Used for the First Time Ever. Game On

Posted by in category: energy

We’re one step further down the path to limitless clean power.

Feb 9, 2024

Massive hydrogen reservoir discovered beneath an Albanian mine could be an untapped source of clean energy

Posted by in category: energy

From the article: As much as 55,000 tons (50,000 metric tons) of hydrogen could lurk in the reservoir beneath the mine — enough to sustain the high flow rate for 238 years, according to the study.


A portion of ancient oceanic crust that sits atop Albania and hosts one of the largest chromium mines on Earth also contains a huge hydrogen reservoir, offering a potential source of clean energy.

Feb 9, 2024

Microbial research unravels a global nitrogen mystery

Posted by in category: energy

Ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms (AOM) use ammonia for energy and account for the annual oxidation of approximately 2.3 trillion kilograms of nitrogen in soil, freshwater, the subsurface and man-made ecosystems.

But one major question that has remained unanswered for decades is how different AOM species coexist in the same environment: do they compete for ammonia or instead use other alternative compounds for their energy needs?

New research by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), the University of Oklahoma and other collaborators found an answer that significantly changes the understanding of ammonia oxidation, a critical component of the global nitrogen cycle. The research appears in Nature Microbiology.

Feb 8, 2024

China unveils ‘world’s first’ Stirling engine-cooled microwave weapon

Posted by in category: energy

Chinese researchers have reportedly developed a high-powered microwave weapon cooled by a Stirling engine.


Chinese scientists have reportedly used the cooling properties of the Stirling engine to increase the power of a high-power microwave weapon.

Continue reading “China unveils ‘world’s first’ Stirling engine-cooled microwave weapon” »

Feb 8, 2024

Pursuing fusion power

Posted by in category: energy

Many researchers now believe that within the next few decades, power plants will provide carbon-free electricity from thermonuclear fusion.

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