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Self-healing electronic material uses graphene and polymer blend to mimic skin
Researchers at DTU have developed a new kind of electronic material that behaves almost exactly like human skin. The substance could be useful in soft robotics, medicine, and health care. Picture electronic devices that heal the way our skin repairs itself. Researchers at DTU have developed a new material that makes it possible—a flexible, tough and self-healing material that may in the future be used in the health care sector, in robotics and much more. This new material overcomes the weaknesses of the rigid, brittle electronic materials currently used, which can't repair themselves.
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Campeón DTU Alto Impacto, PWR Scramble Champion & CZW Wired Champion Ace Austin
sunrise from technical university of denmark, dtu
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I’m alive and still drawing these two 👌
Henrik Dam was a Danish chemist who discovered Vitamin K in the 1930s. He received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1943 for this discovery, shared with Edward Doisy who had described its structure. Dam was more interested in the vitamin’s effect on humans, for instance as a means to stop internal bleeding...