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The power of deuteration brings insight for mRNA-based drug delivery and vaccines
The National Deuteration Facility is providing deuterated cholesterol, an essential ingredient in lipid nanoparticles for the delivery of vaccines using mRNA, to academic and industry partners.
Collaborative research brings new insights into radioactive waste, nuclear fuel and nuclear waste forms
ANSTO researchers have demonstrated longstanding expertise in the study of nuclear fuel and radioactive waste with two recent journal articles in a special issue of Frontiers of Chemistry.
Innovator in energy and sustainability uses power of synchrotron light to make advances
ANSTO scientists will participate in three new ARC Industrial Transformation Training Centres
ANSTO scientists are participating investigators in three new ARC Industrial Transformation Training Centres, recently announced by the Government.
ANSTO offers new career opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
Australia’s knowledge centre for nuclear science and engineering, ANSTO, announced an exciting career opportunity for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
Seafood origin research gathers momentum with benefits for consumers, industry and government
ANSTO’s food provenance research gathers momentum with progress on the development of handheld technology for off-site assessments of origin tiger prawns and an expansion of the work to other seafood species.
Are landscape changes linked to loss of traditional Indigenous Australian burning techniques?
Research investigates traditional Indigenous Australian burning techniques in managing landscape and reducing fuel loads.
Aboriginal ochre art under high-tech ‘hands-off’ focus to map culture trail
Frontiers of synchrotron research suggest even brighter future for materials science and engineering
Peter Lay and Wei Kong Pang recognised by ANSTO for contributions to synchrotron research
Professor Peter Lay from the University of Sydney has been awarded the Australian Synchrotron Lifetime Contribution Award by ANSTO, the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation.
Atomic structure behaves like gears and torsion-springs to contribute to extreme compressibility
One zoo, two nuclear scientists, and 30 schools: Welcome to World Environment Day
Research confirms that ancient Tasmania was not a ‘wilderness’ but an Indigenous cultural landscape
Recent studies led by the University of Melbourne have revealed that the Palawa people’s ancient land stewardship techniques have profoundly shaped the landscape of western Lutruwita, within the traditional territories located in Tasmania.
Understanding how adaptive immune cells recognise and interact with the SARS CoV-2 virus
A team of scientists led by Monash University and the University of Melbourne in association with the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity have made progress in clarifying the molecular interactions that underpin how our adaptive immune cells recognise SARS CoV-2, which causes COVID-19.

The impact of boron on glass surface properties
Within the bulk structure of such glasses, boron is known to be a key actor, as it exhibits intriguing and composition-dependent changes in coordination state that often drive properties.
ANSTO looks forward to lending its significant nuclear science and technology capabilities to support AUKUS
The new trilateral security partnership between Australia, the UK and the US (AUKUS) is a historically significant development for nuclear science and technology in Australia.
3D printing of single atom catalysts pioneered by research team for industrial chemical and energy applications
A large international collaboration has developed a straightforward and cost-effective synthesizing approach using a 3D printing technique to produce single atom catalysts (SACs)—potentially paving the way for large scale commercial production with broad industrial applications.