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Formerly NOHMs Technologies, the company combines proprietary electrolyte with a newly developed silicon anode design for a low-cost, high-performance and safer lithium-ion battery
ROCHESTER, N.Y.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–NOHMs Technologies, long recognized as a leading provider of advanced electrolyte products for next-generation lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries, today announced its relaunch as Sionic Energy, transforming its business to deliver complete advanced battery cell designs that incorporate its breakthrough technologies into a drop-in, rapidly commercialized, low cost, high performance, safer Li-ion technology.
Sionic’s silicon battery cell designs incorporate the company’s complete technology innovations that deliver up to 50% greater energy density, 30% lower cost, and increased safety, and can be integrated into cylindrical, pouch, or prismatic cell formats in existing cell production supply chains and infrastructure.
WASHINGTON – Today, President Joe Biden announced his intent to nominate the following 10 individuals to serve on key Administration boards and commissions.
Deirdre Hamilton for Member, National Mediation Board
Cynthia Hogan for Member, Board of Directors of the Corporation for National and Community Service
Catherine McLaughlin for Member, Board of Directors of the Corporation for National and Community Service
Shirley Sagawa for Member, Board of Directors of the Corporation for National and Community Service
Evelyn M. Fujimoto for Member, Board of Directors of the National Institute of Building Sciences
Lori Peek for Member, Board of Directors of the National Institute of Building Sciences
Sionic Energy Launches to Commercialize Next-Generation Lithium-Ion Battery Cells for Mobility and Consumer Electronic Applications apnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from apnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Apr. 20, 2021 7:38 PM
Scientists have sequenced ancient DNA from soil for the first time, and the advance will transform what is known about everything from evolution to climate change.
The study of ancient DNA has profoundly changed our image of ourselves: less fashioned by God as if from clay and more the spawn of prehistoric sex fiends. Now a new paper is changing our picture of the black bear of ancient Mexico – which, it turns out, did not relieve itself only in the woods.
Around 16,000 years ago, during the tail end of the Stone Age, black bears defecated in a cave. We know this thanks to researchers from the University of Copenhagen – led by Prof. Eske Willerslev – who recreated the genomes of plants, animals and bacteria from microscopic fragments of DNA detected in the soil of Chiquihuite Cave in northern Mexico. Their momentous discovery of ursine choices for defecation sites was published Monday in
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IMAGE: Anushree Chatterjee working with graduate student Dana Stamo in her lab at CU Boulder within the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering. view more
Credit: College of Engineering & Applied Science, University of Colorado Boulder
When disease outbreaks happen, response time in developing and distributing treatments is crucial to saving lives. Unfortunately, developing custom drugs as countermeasures is often a slow and difficult process.
But researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder have created a platform that can develop effective and highly specific peptide nucleic acid therapies for use against any bacteria within just one week. The work is detailed in Nature