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Zhejiang University (ZJU)

Zhejiang University (ZJU)

Zhejiang University (abbreviated ZJU) is an elite C9 League university located in Hangzhou, the capital of Zhejiang province

The possibilities are promising for night-time radiative warming using the atmosphere

Autonomous intelligent oceanic exploration is upon us

A potential tool for protecting crops from mercury pollution and possible mercury remediation

A fingertip-sized on-chip spectrometer offers new functions in all fields of science and industry

Smelling disease on your breath with a robot nose that senses biomarkers

A LEGO-like artificial intelligence chip that is is stackable and reconfigurable for upgrades and features

Could solar cells enable devices that transmit data and produce power underwater?

Power-generating windows get solar cells with 30-year lifetimes

A new class of materials that are both sensing mediums and nanogenerators are poised to revolutionize multifunctional material technology

Wireless handheld spectrometer costs less than $300 and can enable remote medical diagnostics

Spectral images, which contain more color information than is obtainable with a typical camera, reveal characteristics of tissue and other biological samples that can’t be seen by the naked eye. A new smartphone-compatible device that is held like a pencil could make it practical to acquire spectral images of everyday objects and may eventually be

Wireless handheld spectrometer costs less than $300 and can enable remote medical diagnostics

Could a cocktail of geoengineering approaches help the climate?

Geoengineering is a catch-all term that refers to various theoretical ideas for altering Earth’s energy balance to combat climate change. New research from an international team of atmospheric scientists published by Geophysical Research Letters investigates for the first time the possibility of using a “cocktail” of geoengineering tools to reduce changes in both temperature and precipitation caused

Could a cocktail of geoengineering approaches help the climate?

Chemicals That Make Plants Defend Themselves Could Replace Pesticides

Chemical triggers that make plants defend themselves against insects could replace pesticides, causing less damage to the environment. New research published in Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters identifies five chemicals that trigger rice plants to fend off a common pest – the white-backed planthopper, Sogatella furcifera Pesticides are used around the world to control insects

Chemicals That Make Plants Defend Themselves Could Replace Pesticides

New Computational Technique Means Big Advances in Color 3D Printing Process

Working with researchers at Zhejiang University in China, Changxi Zheng, assistant professor of computer science at Columbia Engineering, has developed a technique that enables hydrographic printing, a widely used industrial method for transferring color inks on a thin film to the surface of manufactured 3D objects, to color these surfaces with the most precise alignment

New Computational Technique Means Big Advances in Color 3D Printing Process

Chinese scientists upbeat on development of invisibility cloak

One team has already made a cat ‘disappear’ with a device that has huge military potential Mainland scientists are increasingly confident of developing the world’s first invisibility cloak, using technology to hide objects from view and make them “disappear”. The central government has funded at least 40 research teams over the past three years to

Chinese scientists upbeat on development of invisibility cloak

Ultra-light Aerogel Produced at a Zhejiang University Lab

A research team headed by Professor Gao Chao have developed ultra-light aerogel – it breaks the record of the world’s lightest material with surprising flexibility and oil-absorption. This progress is published in the “Research Highlights” column in Nature. Aerogel is the lightest substance recorded by Guinness Book of World Records. It gets its name due

Ultra-light Aerogel Produced at a Zhejiang University Lab

VIDEO: Thought-controlled quadcopter takes to the skies

Can be controlled by thought alone Up, down, bank, take a photo! Researchers at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China, have developed a quadcopter that can be controlled by thought alone. The idea is to give people with impaired motor abilities a new avenue for interaction. Their system relies on the commercially available Emotiv electroencephalography (EEG) headset to interpret brain activity as

VIDEO: Thought-controlled quadcopter takes to the skies

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