We've updated our Privacy Policy to make it clearer how we use your personal data. We use cookies to provide you with a better experience. You can read our Cookie Policy here.

Advertisement

Latest Articles

Metal sink, plug-hole visible, tap running.
Article

Your PFAS Questions Answered by Professor Rainer Lohmann

How concerned should we be about PFAS in our drinking water? Professor Rainer Lohmann answers this question and more.
A city skyline obscured by blue-tinted smog.
Article

Advances in Volatile Organic Compounds Detection

Discover how scientists measure the air around us to track pollution and diagnose disease, including cancer and diabetes.
Saturn and its rings, as seen from the Cassini–Huygens space research mission.
Article

Mass Spectrometry in Space: Insights From a NASA Expert

Explore how mass spectrometry is transforming planetary science – delivering key data from space missions to Titan, Venus and beyond – with expert insights from a NASA expert.
Overhead shot of a fried egg on tomato and toast with herbs and seasoning laying on a floral plate with a fork at the edge.
Article

Could Egg-Derived Xeno-miRs Influence Chemotherapy Response?

Could what's on your plate change your chemo outcome? Dietary microRNAs from food like eggs could affect cancer drug response – here’s what in silico analysis reveals about this promising discovery.
A graphic of a jar of honey, in blue, with the text "Biomarkers in Focus" in the foreground.
Article

The Technique That Can Distinguish Up-Market Floral Honey

Is the high-end world of honey rife with fraud? One research team has developed a test to help determine just that.
Dozens of jam-filled, flower-shaped biscuits on a blue conveyor belt in a factory.
Article

How AI Is Reducing Food Waste

Technology Networks speaks to some of the new AI-powered pioneers targeting food waste.
Hands holding a digital Earth with eco icons, symbolizing lab sustainability and green practices.
Article

How Green Is Your Lab?

This article explores how lab sustainability goes beyond equipment upgrades, highlighting practical strategies and cultural shifts that empower scientists to reduce waste, cut energy use and embed greener practices in everyday research.
A model of two medical implant devices, a hip implant and knee implant, installed on fake bone.
Article

Graphene Foam Advances Lab-Grown Cartilage for Osteoarthritis Treatment

Researchers have developed a novel approach to making lab-grown cartilage, using electrically-conductive graphene foam to apply direct electrical stimulation during progenitor cell growth. The method results in mechanically stronger cartilage.
Two people in hazmat suits picking up a bucket containing unknown contaminants.
Article

From Detection to Protection: How Raman Spectroscopy Is Changing the Game

You can’t clean up what you can’t detect, whether it’s dealing with the aftermath of a chemical spill or checking food for adulteration. Find out how spatially offset Raman spectroscopy is a game-changer in non-invasive chemical characterization.
A graphic of a green battery symbol, surrounded by green circuits.
Article

Bringing NASA’s Metal-Hydrogen Batteries to Grid Storage

Dr. Majid Keshavarz, chief technical officer of the battery producer Enervenue, tells Technology Networks how his team is commercializing a long-overlooked NASA battery technology for grid-scale applications.
Advertisement