The outstanding properties of 2D materials for critical applications in semiconductors, battery technology, photovoltaics, and numerous other areas render them a key emerging field of research.
Quantifying the coupling between energy levels is key to retrieving information about the structure of a molecule and its interaction with the environment. The coupling can be studied using ...
The exceptional properties of 2D materials for important applications in semiconductors, battery technology, photovoltaics, and several other fields render them a key developing area of research.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 98, No. 20 (Sep. 25, 2001), pp. 11265-11270 (6 pages) The power of two-dimensional (2D) IR spectroscopy as a ...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 110, No. 23 (June 4, 2013), pp. 9243-9248 (6 pages) We provide a systematic characterization of the nanosecond ...
Native Infrared Spectroscopy spectroscopy produces high-resolution molecular maps of live cells and cell organelles.
Although most of our electronic devices, like mobile phones, laptops and electric vehicles use lithium rechargeable batteries, what is going on inside them is not fully understood. Researchers from ...
Infrared spectroscopy (IRS) is a technique used to analyze individual substances in isolation or a mixture, using their spectral information. IRS is based on the measurement of the wavelength and ...
An IR spectroscopy technique for identifying proteins is said to be the first new method developed in the field for 20 years. Optical spectroscopy could have significant potential for protein analysis ...
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was developed to detect protons, and has since then been applied in studying the molecular structure of proteins, RNA, DNA complexes, and interactions ...