Energy from tears: Introducing the smart contact lens battery
Singapore scientists develop ultra-thin battery for smart contact lenses, powered by tear fluid. A revolution in the field!
Singapore scientists develop ultra-thin battery for smart contact lenses, powered by tear fluid. A revolution in the field!
In three years, enormous progress has been made: scientists are ever closer to "enlisting" insects for the most disparate tasks. Starting with cockroaches.
Another point in favor of photovoltaics: exhausted panels can find new life by becoming thermoelectric material. A 'reincarnation' that will make them still useful for collecting energy.
Printing processes may have found a new ally for the environment: this sunflower pollen paper developed in Singapore.
From food waste such as tamarind shell a really interesting prospect of producing materials for superconductors of electric vehicles
A special glue that increases its bond depending on the electrical charge it receives has entered the market with a special mission: to repair blood vessels. And not only.
The ingenious and effective system developed by the Singapore team can bring sunlight to elevators, parking lots and underground areas
The University of Singapore develops an electrode capable of receiving and sending signals to plants: the developments are innumerable.
Two thin sheets of glass with a "filling" of water, hydrogel and stabilizer: the liquid window is born, a revolution for energy saving
What if food preservatives were plant-based? The discovery is here, it's already two years old and is now being perfected: it can change the food industry.
In less than a minute, human skin is printed with a lot of texture. The printable material is based on skin cells and collagen.
Future wars will be faster and more technological, but less human than ever: welcome to the era of robot soldiers. There is a perfect place to test advanced weapons: they are the Wallops Islands, a small patch of land off the coast of Virginia that seems to have come straight from Asimov's pen. If a fishing boat had passed there a year ago he would have seen half a dozen dinghies circulating in the area: a closer look would have revealed that the dinghies had no one on board. … Read more
According to a plan launched in March, Singapore plans to move industries, transportation hubs and underground warehouses to free up surface space.
To remove people from videos, the developer mixed two different "training" models: one tracks moving objects, the other erases them.
A toilet capable of producing biogas from our… er… biological activities? It would be a pretty good innovation.