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Volume 3 Issue 4, April 2018

Nanofibrils are abundant and critical structural components in nature, for example, in the exoskeleton of shrimps. The design principles of nanofibrils can be exploited for the development of new and sustainable materials. In this Review, hierarchical design strategies for cellulose, silk and chitin nanofibrils in nature and in materials engineering are discussed.

See Shengjie Ling, David L. Kaplan & Markus J. Buehler 3, 18016 (2018).

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Research Highlights

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Reviews

  • Sodium-ion batteries are an appealing alternative to lithium-ion batteries because they use raw materials that are less expensive, more abundant and less toxic. The background leading to such promises is carefully assessed in terms of cell and battery production, as well as raw material supply risks, for sodium-ion and modern lithium-ion batteries.

    • Christoph Vaalma
    • Daniel Buchholz
    • Stefano Passerini
    Perspective
  • Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have emerged as a revolutionary class of photovoltaic technology. Here, we review recent progress and challenges in scaling up PSCs towards commercialization. We discuss several areas, including device architectures, deposition methods, scalable deposition of perovskite and charge transport layers, device stability, module-level characterization and techno-economic analyses.

    • Zhen Li
    • Talysa R. Klein
    • Kai Zhu
    Review Article
  • Nanofibrils are abundant and critical structural components in nature that can be exploited for novel and sustainable materials. In this Review, hierarchical design strategies for cellulose, silk and chitin nanofibrils in nature and in materials engineering are discussed.

    • Shengjie Ling
    • David L. Kaplan
    • Markus J. Buehler
    Review Article
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