A simple way of making hydrogen from alcohol by using iron and UV light
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 8-Jun-2026 14:16 ET (8-Jun-2026 18:16 GMT/UTC)
In an effort to develop catalysts from abundant and inexpensive elements, researchers from Kyushu University have found that mixing methanol, iron ions, and sodium hydroxide and then irradiating it with UV light generates hydrogen gas at rates comparable to those of catalysts used in today’s markets. The team hopes their findings will lead to more sustainable hydrogen energy production.
Researchers at Tsinghua University, Southern University of Science and Technology and Eastern Institute of Technology have successfully grown low-defect metallic θ-TaN single crystals with room-temperature thermal exceeding that of copper and silver, shattering the long-established ceiling for conventional metallic matetials. The combination of very high thermal conductivity, metallic electrical behavior and outstanding thermal stability makes θ-TaN a promising candidate for effective thermal management in power electronics and advanced chips.
Researchers from Zhejiang University and their collaborators have developed Qjump, a hybrid quantum-classical algorithm for tackling combinatorial optimization problems. By combining shallow-circuit quantum sampling with classical local search, Qjump effectively "jumps" between candidate solution landscapes to overcome local minima. On up to 104 superconducting qubits, Qjump demonstrated its potential to outperform a highly optimized simulated annealing algorithm, marking a significant step toward practical quantum advantage on near-term quantum hardware.
POSTECH Professor Sung-Min Park’s team develops technology to reconstruct speech through movements of neck muscles.
Originally deployed to record re-entry signals of the OSIRIS-REx return capsule, a T-shaped fiber optic cable draped across the ground at a Nevada airfield also captured unique aspects of a Cessna 172’s speed and maneuvering.
The Biophysics Collaborative Access Team (BioCAT)—led by Illinois Institute of Technology faculty Thomas Irving, Professor of Biology; Weikang Ma, Professor of Biology; and Jesse Hopkins, Professor of Physics—has received the first installment of $2.6 million of a renewal award from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health to continue operating the BioCAT beamline at Sector 18-ID at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory for the next five years.
According to a study from MIT, NDMA, a carcinogen that has been found in some drugs and drinking water contaminated by chemical plants, may have a much more severe impact on children than adults.