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Trinity College Dublin

Trinity College Dublin

Trinity College (Irish: Coláiste na Tríonóide), officially the College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, is the sole constituent college of the University of Dublin, a research university located in Dublin, Ireland

Could babies offer a new direction to overcome limitations of machine learning?

A drug-resistant mould is spreading from the environment and infecting susceptible people’s lungs

Opening the blood-brain barrier temporarily to deliver medication to the brain

Can you imagine a world powered by 100 percent renewable electricity and fuels?

An asthma breakthrough could result in improved therapeutic options

An important step towards patching a damaged heart

Economical renewable energy from water splitting gets big help from artificial intelligence

Scientists from Trinity have taken a giant stride towards solving a riddle that would provide the world with entirely renewable, clean energy from which water would be the only waste product. Reducing humanity’s carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions is arguably the greatest challenge facing 21stcentury civilisation – especially given the ever-increasing global population and the heightened

Economical renewable energy from water splitting gets big help from artificial intelligence

Optical limiting is a new way to safeguard drones, surveillance cameras and other equipment against laser attacks

An international team of researchers has reported a new way to safeguard drones, surveillance cameras and other equipment against laser attacks, which can disable or destroy the equipment. The capability is known as optical limiting. The work, published in the journal Nature Communication, also describes a superior manner of telecom switching without the use of electronics;

Optical limiting is a new way to safeguard drones, surveillance cameras and other equipment against laser attacks

If you need more energy storage just print it with MXene ink

Researchers from Drexel University and Trinity College in Ireland, have created ink for an inkjet printer from a highly conductive type of two-dimensional material called MXene. Recent findings, published in Nature Communications, suggest that the ink can be used to print flexible energy storage components, such as supercapacitors, in any size or shape. Conductive inks have

If you need more energy storage just print it with MXene ink

Did we just find an off switch for inflammation?

Scientists have discovered a new metabolic process in the body that can switch off inflammation. They have discovered that ‘itaconate’ – a molecule derived from glucose – acts as a powerful off-switch for macrophages, which are the cells in the immune system that lie at the heart of many inflammatory diseases including arthritis, inflammatory bowel

Did we just find an off switch for inflammation?

Giant molecular cages with huge surface area for energy conversion and drug delivery

Scientists from Trinity College Dublin and AMBER, the Science Foundation Ireland-funded materials science research centre hosted in Trinity College Dublin, have created ‘molecular cages’ that can maximise the efficiency of converting molecules in chemical reactions, and that may in future also be used as sensors and drug-delivery agents. The cages can be packed with different

Giant molecular cages with huge surface area for energy conversion and drug delivery

Scientists make major breakthrough in smart printed electronics

Scientists in AMBER, the Science Foundation Ireland-funded materials science research centre hosted in Trinity College Dublin, have fabricated printed transistors consisting entirely of 2-dimensional nanomaterials for the first time. These 2D materials combine exciting electronic properties with the potential for low-cost production. This breakthrough could unlock the potential for applications such as food packaging that

Scientists make major breakthrough in smart printed electronics

Silly Putty plus graphene can detect and measure the steps of small spiders

Graphene Flagship researchers from Trinity College Dublin in collaboration with the National Graphene Institute (NGI) at The University of Manchester, have used graphene to make a polysilicone polymer, known commonly as the novelty children’s material Silly Putty®, conduct electricity. Using this conductive polymer they found that they were about to create sensitive electromechanical sensors. The

Silly Putty plus graphene can detect and measure the steps of small spiders

Chemists devise revolutionary 3D bone-scanning technique

Chemists from Trinity College Dublin, in collaboration with RCSI, have devised a revolutionary new scanning technique that produces extremely high-res 3D images of bones — without exposing patients to X-ray radiation. The chemists attach luminescent compounds to tiny gold structures to form biologically safe ‘nanoagents’ that are attracted to calcium-rich surfaces, which appear when bones

Chemists devise revolutionary 3D bone-scanning technique

Researchers’ breakthrough may accelerate hydrogen’s replacement of fossil fuels

Researchers at the CRANN nanoscience institute at Trinity College Dublin have discovered a new clean energy material that will increase the adoption of hydrogen as a fuel in energy-efficient transport. Hydrogen has been described as the ultimate clean energy source and, potentially, a real alternative to fossil fuels. It is seen as very attractive as

Researchers’ breakthrough may accelerate hydrogen’s replacement of fossil fuels

Scientists discover a new form of light that could transform the future fibre-optic communications

Irish physicists researching photonics have made a new discovery that will profoundly impact our understanding of the fundamental nature of light and possibly transform the future of communications. The discovery by Prof Paul Eastham from Trinity College Dublin’s School of Physics and Prof John Donegan from the Science Foundation Ireland-backed CRANN research centre could have

Scientists discover a new form of light that could transform the future fibre-optic communications

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