Advanced materials research
New oxygen ion conducting material for use in solid oxide fuel cells and other devices
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New oxygen ion conducting material for use in solid oxide fuel cells and other devices
Elizabeth joined ANSTO at the beginning of 2024 and works as a Research Support Officer for Environment where she is involved in diverse research including ground water sampling and coral provenance.
ANSTO has contributed to research that indicated that Aboriginal people had a broad diet and intensive plant processing technologies, allowing them to respond to changes in climate, sea level and vegetation over the last ca. 65,000 years.
ABC has reported space research on plants being sent to the moon at the Centre for Accelerator Science.
A cross-disciplinary team has used laboratory-based and synchrotron-based infrared spectroscopy imaging techniques to monitor the waxy surface of living plant leaves in real-time to gain insights into plant physiology in response to disease, biological changes or environmental stress.
A world-first processing technology developed in collaboration by ANSTO’s Minerals unit.
The high-energy heavy-ion microprobe is used for the characterisation or modification of material properties at depths from approximately 1 micrometre to maximum depths of up to 500 micrometres from the material surface.
ANSTO presented and participated in a panel discussion at the annual Natural Products Futures Forum in Ballina.
ANSTO has collaborated on a study assessing the impact of the commonly-used food additive titanium dioxide (TiO2) on gut microbiota and inflammation.
Three ANSTO scientists are contributing to two recently awarded Australian Research Council Discovery Project grants.
Bianca Shepherd is ANSTO’s Engineering Support Workshop Manager, confidently overseeing the manufacture and fabrication of equipment and specialised parts for critical Australian scientific and landmark infrastructure.
A major study has identified urbanisation and climate change as future threats to drinking water quality.
Dr. Sue Brown is a Senior Radiochemist within the ANSTO Minerals business unit.
Tara Djokic is a geologist currently based in the Palaeontology Department of the Australian Museum Research Institute where she is investigating the fossilisation processes of an 11-16 million-year-old rainforest-lake deposit from central N
Dr Ceri Brenner appointed new leader of the Centre for Accelerator Science
Researchers from UNSW have found an extraordinary material that does expand or contract over an extremely wide temperature range and may be one of the most stable materials known.
Accelerator Operator.