Scientists have filmed nanoscale ice crystals adapting to trapped air bubbles without losing structural integrity.
Scientists have for the first time recorded complicated structures in ice formed by freezing liquid water at the nanoscale.
Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have announced a new discovery.
You'd think there's nothing surprising left to discover about water. After all, researchers have been studying its properties for centuries.
You'd think there's nothing surprising left to discover about water. After all, researchers have been studying its properties ...
One particularly intriguing phase of confined water is called the “premelting state.” In this unusual condition, water appears to hover between freezing and melting simultaneously, resisting ...
Ice crystals are surprisingly tolerant of defects in their structure. The findings come from the first-ever molecular-resolution observations of nanoscale samples of ice frozen from liquid water.
A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences sheds ...
Structural and computational approaches uncover the molecular basis for dimerization, open-closed conformational transitions, and the dynamic behavior of the human angiotensin-I converting enzyme ...