Technology ❯ Materials Science
Carbon Nanotubes Graphene Nanoparticles Chemical Engineering Nanomaterials Quantum Materials Composite Materials Thin Films Two-Dimensional Materials Energy Materials Magnetic Materials Phosphorescent Materials Catalysts Perovskite Materials Synthetic Materials Cloaking Technology Synthetic Biology Two-dimensional Materials Catalysis Vapor-Phase Infiltration Silicon Nanospheres Nanoscale Devices Colloidal Systems Quantum Sensors Catalyst Engineering Porous Materials Metasurfaces Microspheres Catalyst Development Self-Assembled Monolayers Sensors Carbon Nanostructures MXene Phosphor Technology Phosphors Surface Engineering 3D Printing Inorganic Materials Spintronics Ion Implantation Biocompatible Materials 2D Materials Electrochemistry Sustainable Materials Molecular Structures Polymer Coatings Graphene Research Quantum Dots Tungsten Disulphide Functional Materials Carbon Nanomaterials Carbon-Based Nanomaterials Photocatalysis Recycling Technologies Nanowires Optical Materials Charge Transfer Nanoscale Reactions Upconversion Nanoparticles Nanocrystals Imaging Techniques Glass Materials Optoelectronics Electrospinning
Low-voltage electron microscopy on graphene shows defect-pinned edge atoms confining liquid droplets far below their normal freezing point.