Stretchy electronics are on a roll lately. Last week we ran a story on a new flexible conductor developed by researchers at the North Carolina State University, and now, in yet another exciting ...
Inspired by chameleons and other colorful animals, researchers at the the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology have developed a way to 3D ...
Chinese scientists say they have developed a vivid 3D printing ink without colourants that is safe to use in toys that change colour in relation to body temperature, or even for food decorations. The ...
Researchers at the University of Tokyo have created a single-step process to print conductive material on cloth, allowing manufacturers to build stretchable wearables that can test vital signs like ...
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