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Light May Recast Copper as Chemical Industry ‘Holy Grail’

A potentially cheap and environmentally friendly way of making propylene oxide

University of Michigan
Tue, 04/02/2013 - 16:34
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Wouldn’t it be convenient if you could reverse the rusting of your car by shining a bright light on it? It turns out that this concept works for undoing oxidation on copper nanoparticles, and it could lead to an environmentally friendly production process for an important industrial chemical, University of Michigan engineers have discovered.

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“We report a new physical phenomenon that has potentially significant practical implications,” says Suljo Linic, an associate professor of chemical engineering, who led the study, which was published in the March 29, 2013, issue of Science.

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Comments

Submitted by umberto mario tunesi on Mon, 04/08/2013 - 22:23

Terracotta Army

It may sound incosistent, but it's no so: on a National Geographic's documentary I saw how its makers knew and used high frequency magnetic energy. What I mean, is that Science and Technique can learn much more - and much more cheaply - looking behind their shoulders, than squeezing their eyes to look for a thought-of Horizon. Thank you.

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