40 years of materials science
- Picture:
A size label made on the sample by lithography ended up right at the frontier of crystal growth – and happened to match the ICMAB anniversary year! Captured with Olympus BX51 microscope.
A size label made on the sample by lithography ended up right at the frontier of crystal growth – and happened to match the ICMAB anniversary year! Captured with Olympus BX51 microscope.
Cut through a sheet of Bacterial Cellulose and you find an entire hidden world — a sprawling fibrous metropolis, with its builders still roaming the streets. Nature's own nanofactory, caught mid-construction.
Biopharmaceutical particulate material generated by processing with compressed CO2, formulated as a platform for the encapsulation, transport and release of drugs, which resembles an artificial bone in the form of a microparticle.
A microscope slide with a sample of an organic material used in solar cells with a spectroscopic image of the sample in the background.
An organic material transitioning from a polycrystalline thin film towards a tangle of three-dimensional elongated crystals. Captured with Olympus BX51 microscope.
Polymeric fibers composed of drug-loaded nanoparticles serve as a platform for formulating solid dosage forms. The drug used presents a pharmaceutical challenge due to its low water solubility; therefore, the use of these fibers helps increase the drug's solubility and bioavailability in the body.
Say goodbye to the dreaded needle — this Bacterial Cellulose Microneedle is here to make injections and blood tests a thing of the past. Grown, not manufactured, this tiny forest of spikes is your skin's new best friend ;)
Thin films of a polymer before (transparent) and after (opaque) annealing.