Argonne researchers have developed a method for combining diamond with a thin layer of molybdenum disulfide, enabling electronic devices to operate at room temperature and potentially improving performance in challenging environments.
Morten E. Iversen, partner at Sandwater, said that Filics technology offers not only substantial space efficiency but also a flexible, scalable path to the automation of warehouses:
For Sandwater, it represents a transformative solution that can redefine warehouse operations—reducing space needs, boosting productivity, and achieving a smaller footprint through a smart hardware/software combination. We have been truly impressed by the team.
The Filics Unit will be further developed for use in floor block warehouses by the end of 2025, enabling up to 66 per cent space savings to be achieved. In the medium term, the company plans to develop the technology further to enable fully autonomous truck loading in under five minutes.
Year 2025 portable dialysis machine.
Where (C: molar concentration, R: ideal gas constant, T: absolute temperature).
While ED uses both cation and anion exchange membranes to remove charged components, it cannot purify neutral species because they are not affected by the electric field (Fig. 1 A). Therefore, its application as a dialyzer is limited by its inability to simultaneously remove neutral urea and positively charged creatinine. Despite their merits, none of these techniques can simultaneously purify a wide size-range of target species, spanning from salt ions to biomolecular contaminants, in a single-step process. In contrast, one of the nanoelectrokinetic phenomenon, the ion concentration polarization (ICP) based purification technology [28,29,30,31,32], as reported recently, aligns with these criteria, owing to its distinctive electrical filtration capabilities and scalability. Briefly, the perm-selectivity of nanoporous membranes initiates an electrolyte concentration polarization on both sides of the membrane. In the case of cation-selective membranes, an ion depletion zone forms on the anodic side of the membrane [33, 34]. Charged species reroute their trajectories along the concentration gradients near this ion depletion zone, serving as a pivotal site for the purification of a broad range of contaminants.
In this study, for portable PD, we firstly proposed a scalable ICP dialysate regeneration device. ICP removes cationic components through the cation exchange membrane, anionic components by electrostatic repulsion and neutral species through an electrochemical reaction at the electrode (Fig. 1B). When urea, a neutrally charged body toxin, begins to undergo direct oxidation at the electrode inlet, the concentration of urea around the electrode decreases. The urea concentration profile exhibits a decrease closer to the electrode, and as urea diffuses towards the electrode vicinity, a chain reaction of direct oxidation occurs. As a result, a purified dialysate could be continuously obtained by extracting a stream from the ion depletion zone. Micro-nanofluidic dialysate regeneration platform was upscaled in two-and three-dimensional directions using a commercial 3D printer as shown in Fig. 1C.
Palachai, N., Buranrat, B., Pariwatthanakun, C. et al. Neuroprotective effects of Cratoxylum formosu m (L.) leaf extract on β-amyloid-induced injury in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. Sci Rep 15, 44,730 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-28739-3
A research team has developed a triangular mechanical network that can squeeze and wiggle in a multitude of preprogrammed ways [1]. The metamaterial design—realized in experiments with various materials, including Legos—may have applications from shock absorption to protein modeling. But the researchers also demonstrated that their structures can solve problems in matrix algebra. Performing computations in materials without converting information to electrical signals could be useful when durability and energy efficiency are more important than computing power, for example, in components of some soft robots.
Recent work showed that a mechanical system can perform similar computations [2]. However, this previous demonstration was limited in the number of inputs and outputs that it could accommodate, says Yair Shokef of Tel Aviv University in Israel. It also had rather large components that made it difficult to adapt to different applications.
Shokef and his colleagues, who produced the latest demonstration, built their 2D networks from equilateral triangles. Each triangle consisted of rigid beams with hinge points at each vertex and at the center of each side, for a total of three so-called corner nodes and three edge nodes per triangle. Importantly, each triangle had one or two “bonds”—beams that connected edge nodes and that determined the ways in which the triangle could be distorted or flexed.
Professor Jeong-Min Baik’s research group of the SKKU School of Advanced Materials Science and Engineering has developed a reusable electrokinetic filtration platform capable of filtering more than 99% of ultrafine nanoplastic particles smaller than 50 nm even under commercial-level high-flow conditions.
Plastic pollution, which has surged in recent years through industrialization and the pandemic era, poses a direct threat to human health. In particular, nanoplastics smaller than 100 nm—thousands of times thinner than a human hair—can readily pass through biological membranes in the body and trigger serious diseases such as immune dysregulation and carcinogenicity.
However, conventional water purification systems have struggled to effectively remove nanoplastics of such small sizes, highlighting technological limitations; studies have even reported the presence of hundreds of thousands of particles in a single bottle of bottled water.
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (MPE), in collaboration with astrophysicists from the Centro de Astrobiología (CAB), CSIC-INTA, have identified the largest sulfur-bearing molecule ever found in space: 2,5-cyclohexadiene-1-thione (C₆H₆S). They made this breakthrough by combining laboratory experiments with astronomical observations. The molecule resides in the molecular cloud G+0.693–0.027, about 27,000 light-years from Earth near the center of the Milky Way.
With a stable six-membered ring and a total of 13 atoms, it far exceeds the size of all previously detected sulfur-containing compounds in space. The study is published in Nature Astronomy.