Graphene 2D Materials MXenes Two-Dimensional Materials Nanostructures Perovskite Materials Molybdenum Disulfide MXene Halide Perovskites Hexagonal Boron Nitride DNA-based Materials Tantalum Oxide Goldene Mesoporous Materials Nanocrystals Metal Nanoparticles Amphiphiles Bismuth Ferrite Tellurium Functional Nanomaterials CNT Properties Boron Nitride Nanotubes Carbon Nanotubes Gold Nanostructures Nanoporous Materials Nanoparticle Applications Quantum Dots Copolymers Hydrophilic Materials Metallic Nanoparticles Diamond Engineering Diamonds Chitin Graphene-based Materials Lanthanide-Doped Nanocrystals Molybdenum Diselenide Metal Nanorods Metal-Organic Frameworks Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles Magnetic Nanodiscs Optical Properties Iron Compounds Rare-Earth Elements Avalanching Nanoparticles Van der Waals Materials
Low-voltage electron microscopy on graphene shows defect-pinned edge atoms confining liquid droplets far below their normal freezing point.