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Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center
Internationally recognized Nanoscience center conducting science and educating Nanoscientists at the highest international level
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Research within medicine, materials and food
Danish researchers have developed a new and faster technology that might pave the way for non-invasive and very early diagnosis of a wide variety of human diseases, which will enable more successful treatments.
Nature knows how to activate and deactivate enzymes on demand, without wasteful protein synthesis and degradation. Surprisingly, methods to do so using tools of chemistry are few. PhD candidate Mireia Casanovas Montasell, Prof. Alexander N. Zelikin and colleagues address this challenge in their new publication, published in Nature Communications.
Researchers at Aarhus University have developed a new and inexpensive way of breaking down polyurethane (PU) plastic into its original components, which can be recycled into new PU material instead of ending up as landfill or in an incinerator.
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