Alexander Beadle
Alexander Beadle is a science writer and editor for Technology Networks. Prior to this, he worked as a freelance science writer. Alexander holds an MChem in materials chemistry from the University of St Andrews, where he won a Chemistry Purdie Scholarship and conducted research into zeolite crystal growth mechanisms and the action of single-molecule transistors.
Latest Content
News
Robotic Research Platform Discovers New, More Efficient Material For Solar Cells
Researchers have developed a new robotic materials acceleration platform (MAP), that can rapidly synthesize and print new semiconductor materials. The platform has already been used to identify a new alloy that has the potential to outperform classic silicon solar cells.
News
Metals Have the Intrinsic Ability To Heal Themselves, New Research Finds
During an experiment designed to test how metals perform under stress, researchers noticed something unexpected – fatigue cracks in a metal sample starting to heal themselves. This finding has important consequences for future self-healing materials.
News
Keeping Bees Safe From Pesticides ‒ Do Current Methods Work?
Many of the most common methods for reducing the impact of pesticides on bee populations are rooted in minimal scientific evidence, according to new research.
News
The Ocean is Changing Color – And Climate Change is Likely To Blame
Researchers have detected color changes in satellite photos of the Earth’s oceans that cannot be explained by normal year-to-year ecological variability alone. They say that these changes are likely a consequence of human-induced climate change.
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New Thermal Cloak Helps Keep Your Car Battery Cool in the Summer
Researchers have developed a prototype “thermal cloak” that can dampen the extreme temperature fluctuations felt in cars left out in the sun.
News
Record-Breaking New Measurement of Electron “Roundness”
Scientists have measured the electric dipole of electrons more precisely than ever before. Their results could have a significant impact on theories for what occurred immediately after the Big Bang.
News
New Metallic Gel Adds a Fourth Dimension to 3D Printing
Researchers have developed a new electrically conductive metallic gel that can be used with commercial-grade 3D printers. The novel printing material also reacts to heat as it dries, meaning it can print in a fourth dimension – time.
Listicle
Microplastics: How Do They Spread?
Download this listicle to explore the routes of microplastic contamination, how microplastics can be detected and remediation techniques.
News
New Material Could Give Robots Artificial Muscles
Researchers have developed a new type of polymer that they say could be used as artificial muscle in medical devices and advanced robots.
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