Scientists have found that water, under extreme pressure and cold temperatures, can split into two different liquid phases.
Water can exist in two liquid states under extreme conditions, reshaping our understanding of its molecular behavior.
Scientists from UC San Diego have uncovered a key finding to one of water's unique properties: at high pressure and low ...
This study explores liquid metal-based flexible three-dimensional integrated circuits (3D ICs), highlighting their ...
The challenge of cooling extremely dense and high-performance infrastructure is a well known problem, but the recent ...
However, studying the liquid-liquid phase transition (LLPT), which is hypothesized to occur in the supercooled regime, has faced challenges that the researchers wanted to address. Phys.org spoke ...
In this video interview from Pittcon, we ask Christopher Palmer about developing novel polymeric materials for microscale liquid phase separations, as well as some of the current trends and challenges ...
A new study by researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign describes a breakthrough in the field of organic ...