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  2. Nanofiber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanofiber

    Nanofibers were first produced via electrospinning more than four centuries ago. [28] [29] Beginning with the development of the electrospinning method, English physicist William Gilbert (1544-1603) first documented the electrostatic attraction between liquids by preparing an experiment in which he observed a spherical water drop on a dry surface warp into a cone shape when it was held below ...

  3. Nanomaterials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanomaterials

    A nanofiber has two external dimensions in the nanoscale, with nanotubes being hollow nanofibers and nanorods being solid nanofibers. A nanoplate/nanosheet has one external dimension in the nanoscale, [20] and if the two larger dimensions are significantly different it is called a nanoribbon. For nanofibers and nanoplates, the other dimensions ...

  4. Carbon nanofiber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanofiber

    Carbon nanofibers (CNFs), vapor grown carbon fibers (VGCFs), or vapor grown carbon nanofibers (VGCNFs) are cylindrical nanostructures with graphene layers arranged as stacked cones, cups or plates. Carbon nanofibers with graphene layers wrapped into perfect cylinders are called carbon nanotubes .

  5. Interfacial polymerization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interfacial_polymerization

    [1] [2] These nanofibers have been shown to detect various gaseous chemicals, such as hydrogen chloride (HCl), ammonia (NH 3), Hydrazine (N 2 H 4), chloroform (CHCl 3), and methanol (CH 3 OH). [1] PANI nanofibers can be further fined-tuned by doping and modifying the polymer chain conformation, among other methods, to increase selectivity to ...

  6. The Nanofibers in '3 Body Problem' Are Real, and Yes, They ...

    www.aol.com/nanofibers-3-body-problem-real...

    THERE ARE A lot of complex scientific topics present in Netflix's 3 Body Problem (presented, believe it or not, in a far more digestible way than the intense concepts presented in author Cixin Liu ...

  7. Nanochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanochemistry

    Nanochemistry is an emerging sub-discipline of the chemical and material sciences that deals with the development of new methods for creating nanoscale materials. [1] The term "nanochemistry" was first used by Ozin in 1992 as 'the uses of chemical synthesis to reproducibly afford nanomaterials from the atom "up", contrary to the nanoengineering and nanophysics approach that operates from the ...

  8. Nanofabrics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanofabrics

    Nanofabrics research is an interdisciplinary effort involving bioengineering, [5] molecular chemistry, physics, electrical engineering, computer science, and systems engineering. [3] Applications of nanofabrics have the potential to revolutionize textile manufacturing [6] and areas of medicine such as drug delivery and tissue engineering. [7]

  9. Here's How to Thicken Mashed Potatoes Quickly - AOL

    www.aol.com/heres-thicken-mashed-potatoes...

    Out of all the mashed potato mistakes you can make, adding too much liquid to your spuds is sure to ruin your day. After all, nobody wants to take a scoop of soupy mashed potatoes! But what if you ...