Fast - spinning spheres show nanoscale systems» secrets:
Rice University lab demonstrates energetic properties of colloids in spinning magnetic field February 7th, 2018
A Rice University lab is using an industrial laser to write graphene patterns on everyday objects, including food, cloth, cardboard and wood.
The discovery came while British chemist Harold Kroto was visiting
the Rice University lab of American chemist Richard Smalley; they were trying to create new forms of carbon that might exist in interstellar space by bombarding graphite with a laser beam.
«Slow - release hydrogel aids immunotherapy for cancer:
Rice University lab's injectable gel feeds steady dose of drugs to tumor cells.»
Not exact matches
Nanoscientist James Tour, a professor at
Rice University, spends his life building molecules in the
lab.
The researchers, Richard E. Smalley and Robert F. Curl Jr. of
Rice University in Houston, and Harold W. Kroto of the
University of Sussex in Brighton, United Kingdom, made their discovery in 1985 in Smalley's
lab at
Rice while working together to study how carbon atoms cluster.
After a postdoctoral stint at a haptics
lab at
Rice University, Israr got a job at Disney in 2009.
When I was at Berkeley, Richard Smalley, a
Rice University chemist, was learning how to grow large quantities of carbon nanotubes in his
lab.
The theoretical study detailed in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and led by
Rice postdoctoral researcher Qian Wang was a collaborative effort by the
labs of three professors at
Rice and one at the
University of Houston, all working under the umbrella of
Rice's Center for Theoretical Biological Physics (CTBP).
And today, as director of the Multi-Robot Systems
Lab at
Rice University, he's aiming to do just that.
Cancer cells are well - known as voracious energy consumers, but even veteran cancer - metabolism researcher Deepak Nagrath was surprised by their latest exploit: Experiments in his
lab at
Rice University show that some cancer cells get 30 - 60 percent of their fuel from eating their neighbors» «words.»
Kohn, Nakhleh and lead author Kevin Liu, their former postdoctoral researcher and now an assistant professor at Michigan State
University, employed
Rice's supercomputers and the Nakhleh
lab's open - source PhyloNet - HMM software to locate statistically likely connections between the re-sequenced complete genomes, some newly determined and some collected previously in a massive effort to understand the evolutionary origins of the laboratory mouse genome.
The
lab of James Tour at
Rice University has demonstrated a way to etch graphene onto food like bread and potatoes, as well as materials like cardboard and cloth, where it could then act as an RFID tag.
«These encouraging results should serve as a spark for another advancement in organic synthesis,» says K. C. Nicolaou, a synthetic chemist at
Rice University, adding that Chematica could increase speed and productivity in chemistry
labs, especially if paired with automated synthesis machines.
For more than a decade, Ralf F. W. Bartenschlager (
University of Heidelberg) and Charles M.
Rice (Rockefeller
University) attempted to coax the hepatitis C virus (HCV) to multiply inside
lab - grown host cells.
WORK HISTORY Sales — Bicycle World and Fitness, Houston, TX 2011 to Present Project Specialist — Houston Community College, Katy, TX 2010 Sales — Luke's Locker, Katy, TX 2009 Market Research Consultant — Qval Property Advisors, LLC, Houston, TX 2008 to 2009 Solutions Support Representative — DataCert Inc., Houston, TX 2006 to 2008 Psychology
Lab Manager and Research Assistant —
Rice University, Houston, TX 2004 to 2005 Research Assistant — Datatude, Inc., Houston, TX 2004 to 2006
Houston, Texas, USA About Blog Andrew Moodie, a PhD candidate at
Rice University in the Earth Science Department, working in Dr. Jeff Nittrouer's sedimentology
lab and research group.