Rice University: Chemists Get Peek at Novel Fluorescence
December 04, 2020
December 04, 2020
HOUSTON, Texas, Dec. 4 (TNSJou) -- Rice University issued the following news release:
That carbon nanotubes fluoresce is no longer a surprise. Finding a second level of fluorescence is surprising and potentially useful.
How does it work? Wait for it.
The Rice University lab of Bruce Weisman, a professor of chemistry who led the pioneering discovery of nanotube fluorescence in 2002, found that single-walled nanotubes emit a delayed secondary fluorescence whe . . .
That carbon nanotubes fluoresce is no longer a surprise. Finding a second level of fluorescence is surprising and potentially useful.
How does it work? Wait for it.
The Rice University lab of Bruce Weisman, a professor of chemistry who led the pioneering discovery of nanotube fluorescence in 2002, found that single-walled nanotubes emit a delayed secondary fluorescence whe . . .