Scientists have created a carbon-negative building material using just seawater and electricity, according to a study ...
Researchers at Northwestern University have expanded the potential of carbon capture technology that plucks CO2 directly from ...
Researchers injected CO2 gas into seawater while applying an electrical current. The process transformed dissolved ions, minerals in seawater into clusters of solid particles. The clusters hold over ...
Learn more here. Radiocarbon dating, or carbon-14 dating, is a scientific method that can accurately determine the age of organic materials as old as approximately 60,000 years. First developed in the ...
Scientists from Skoltech, the Institute of Nanotechnology of Microelectronics, RAS, and other research centers have refined ...
The carbon-14 used in these batteries is extracted from graphite blocks, a byproduct of nuclear reactors that would otherwise be discarded as radioactive waste. By repurposing this material into a ...
Radiocarbon dating, also known as carbon-14 dating, is a method to determine the age of organic materials as old as 60,000 years. First developed in the 1940s at the University of Chicago by Willard ...
The production of building materials is one of the largest emitters of carbon dioxide. This is set to change: A team from the USA has developed a cement that is said to have a negative carbon ...
Advanced carbon fiber materials could be used in applications from wind turbine blades to biomedical implants following the ...
Carbon-14 Used to date once-living materials. Every living organism contains the radioisotope carbon-14. Carbon-14 is formed when neutrons from cosmic radiation collide with nitrogen atoms in our ...
The method transforms CO2 into valuable, carbon-negative building materials using seawater and electricity, offering a scalable solution to reduce emissions and create sustainable construction ...