DTU CHEMISTRY Department of Chemistry
Kemi: EmeritiInorganic Chemistry_Group: Centre for Catalysis and Sustainable Chemistry
Kemitorvet
Building 206, room 138
2800 Kgs. Lyngby
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Just in time for Christmas, a world record is achieved at DTU. Researchers have cut a Rocking Around the Christmas Tree snippet onto a 40-micrometre-wide record.
On 6 December, Regitze Benedicte Carlstedt Lundgreen will defend her PhD thesis. It is possible to attend the defence at DTU in Lyngby or online.
DTU increases admission to the Biomedical Engineering programme, creating a new study line in digital health.
Researchers and businesses will use a GUDP grant to develop new ways to prevent campylobacter bacteria from ending up on chicken meat and to ensure that fewer consumers get sick.
A Christmas tree with a thickness of one atom is made at DTU. It shows how terahertz measurements can be used to ensure the quality of graphene.
Biological invasions are a major threat to biodiversity and the dynamics behind successful invasions remain largely unresolved. Invasion genomics can be used to shed light on genetic diversity pattern during invasion events and to reconstruct the demographic history of invasion events.
A new method designs nanomaterials with less than 10-nanometer precision. It could pave the way for faster, more energy-efficient electronics.