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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNNew, ‘Living’ Building Material Made From Fungi and Bacteria Could Pave the Way to Self-Healing StructuresResearchers are developing the biomaterial as a more environmentally friendly alternative to concrete, but any wide-scale use ...
NASA’s Curiosity rover has uncovered a missing piece in the puzzle of Mars' past atmosphere. Scientists discovered ...
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The Cool Down on MSNScientists debut innovative technology to transform seawater into next-gen building materials: 'We can fully control their properties'"We could create a circularity where we sequester CO2 right at the source." Scientists debut innovative technology to ...
Fighting climate change means finding better ways to capture carbon dioxide (CO2) from factories, power plants, and other big ...
By 2030, Apple wants to slash its carbon emissions by 75 percent compared to 2015. It aims to eliminate 90 percent of that ...
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With affordable materials, researchers pull carbon directly from the air using changes in humidityThe paper demonstrates the significance of a material's pore size (pockets of space within porous materials where carbon dioxide can nestle) in predicting its power to capture carbon. The engineers ...
The concrete industry accounts for roughly 8 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions, but a new study says that it could one day be a source of negative emissions. By taking a page out of nature’s ...
Scientists at Berkeley Lab create solar-powered artificial leaf that turns COâ‚‚ into liquid fuel, marking a major step in ...
Engineers have developed a building material that uses the root-like mycelium of a fungus and bacteria cells. Their results show that this material -- which is manufactured with living cells at low ...
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