RMIT University researchers have tested a more effective way to capture microplastics from wastewater, using a combination of microbubbles and nanobubbles to achieve removal rates of more than 90%.
Scientists are exploring light-activated nanoparticles to kill biofilms in stored drinking water, aiming to make household ...
There research into physical health impacts related to data centers is still in its early stages, but seems comparable to ...
Volunteers searching North Carolina waterways for pollution found tiny plastic pellets in Lake Brandt. Advocates say the ...
KOCHI: A scientific assessment of Kochi’s major waterbodies has found alarming levels of contamination, with all six ...
Ammonia rarely makes headlines, but much of modern life depends on it. The compound of nitrogen and hydrogen is the key ingredient in the fertilizers that help feed roughly half of the world's ...
Milwaukee is building a massive underwater storage facility in Lake Michigan, just south of the Summerfest grounds, to store ...
Iowa INSIGHT, a new environmental monitoring program launching July 1, will track air and water quality to address public ...
The Trump administration wanted the surface of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool to be “American flag blue.” A ...
D onald Trump has a new nemesis, with a name worthy of a supervillain: Scenedesmus.
Scientists have developed a solar desalination system that turns seawater into drinking water without creating environmentally damaging brine. Special laser-textured metal panels use sunlight to ...