Tim Liedl, Professor of Physics at LMU and PI at the cluster of excellence Nanosystems Initiative Munich (NIM), together with colleagues from Ohio University, has now published an article in the journal Nature Physics, which describes
how silver nanoparticles can significantly reduce the energy consumption.
Not exact matches
Testing
silver nanoparticles on fish and other organisms is an important step toward understanding
how they will interact in the human body.
To carry out the study, the team has analysed
how different carbohydrates act on the surface of
silver nanoparticles (Ag - NP) of around 50 nanometres, which have been introduced into cultures of liver cells and tumour cells from the nervous system of mice.
Anti-odor athletic clothes containing
silver nanoparticles have gained a foothold among exercise buffs, but questions have arisen over
how safe and effective they are.
Washing the shirts released a range of
silver concentrations, depending on
how the
nanoparticles were attached.
By tracking the movement of the
silver nanoparticles inside the diffusive memristor, the researchers noticed a striking similarity to
how calcium functions in biological systems.