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Nanotechnology Now - Press Release: Finding the most heat-resistant substances ever made: UVA Engineering secures DOD MURI award to advance high-temperature materials

Nanotechnology Now - Press Release: Finding the most heat-resistant substances ever made: UVA Engineering secures DOD MURI award to advance high-temperature materials
nanotech-now.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nanotech-now.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

2023 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists Announced | The New York Academy of Sciences

Scientists are Developing a Real-Life Freeze Ray to Keep Spacecrafts Cool

Every supervillain needs a weapon capable of striking fear into their enemies. For Despicable Me’s Felonius Gru (Steve Carrell), that weapon is a freeze ray. We first see it early in Despicable Me, when Gru enters a small coffee shop only to find a long line. He freezes the patrons in place in order to skip the line. Dastardly! The origin of the freeze ray is seen in Minions (streaming now on Peacock!), when a young Dr. Nefario demonstrates it to a crowd at Villain-Con. Freeze rays may be standa

Chilling Breakthrough: The Science Behind a Real-Life Freeze Ray Technology for the Air Force

A University of Virginia professor believes he has discovered how to create a freeze-ray device, inspired by the Batman villain, Mr. Freeze. Rather than being a weapon, this device is intended to cool down electronics within spacecraft and high-altitude jets. Do you know that freeze-ray gun that

ARPA-E funds UVA-led team to develop new coating for turbine engin

 E-Mail Elizabeth J. Opila, professor of materials science and engineering and director of the Rolls-Royce University Technology Center on Advanced Material Systems at the University of Virginia, has earned a grant from the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy to increase turbine engine materials temperature tolerance by 200 degrees Celsius. This is an audacious goal for the materials science and engineering community, Opila said. In the turbine engine industry, a ten-degree improvement is cause for celebration. Opila earned a $600,000, phase-one award through the agency s ULTIMATE program, which stands for ultrahigh temperature impervious materials advancing turbine efficiency. ARPA-E s challenge is to develop ultrahigh temperature materials for gas turbine use in the aviation and power generation industries. To achieve this goal, ARPA-E has awarded funds to teams working on four mutually dependent research thrusts: alloy development; coatings for the alloys; systems en

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