posted by Suzie Chhouk
photo credit: Tour Group/Rice University
Here's another step toward a more sustainable future of energy generation: a team of scientists led by Yang Yang of Rice University published their investigations of molybdenum disulfide - a flexible material that can make flexible sheets only a few atoms thick, about 100,000 times thinner than a human hair. The new study has found that by turning it into a nanoporous film, molybdenum disulfide can be used to store energy or to catalyze hydrogen production through hydrogen evolution reaction (HER).
Click to read more excerpts from the article posted by IFLScience.
Click to read more excerpts from the article posted by IFLScience.