An Amino Acid in Plant Waste Offers Unexpected Energy Potential0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- November 1, 2018
Known as glycine, it can generate enough electricity to power smartphones and electronics found in cars.

Known as glycine, it can generate enough electricity to power smartphones and electronics found in cars.

In the past five years, 74 cities have voted to remove fluoride from their drinking water, despite thousands of studies showing it prevents cavities.

The silk fibers produced by Bombyx mori, the domestic silkworm, has been prized for millennia as a strong yet lightweight and luxurious material.

The particle’s most precise measurement yet suggests the LHC isn’t large enough

This is an open access scientific research paper distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution CC-BY (4.0 International) license.

Extremely strong vibration during large impacts, landslides and earthquakes allow rock to flow

Giovanni Aldini’s experiments with a human corpse.

It is assumed, but not experimentally verified, that antimatter masses will behave the same as matter masses in a gravitational field.

A fast-pulsing beam creates a tiny shock wave to dispel water droplets in the air

Scientists are finally unspooling how spider silk works.