← Back to Dashboard
Material Science & AI Impact

Science And Engineering

Origin Data Source OpenAlex
Analysis Computed Jul 8, 2026
AI Synthesis & Market Narrative
Science and engineering are demonstrating rapid advancements in quantum materials and advanced membrane technologies for environmental applications. Concurrently, there is an intense, ongoing debate regarding AI's potential to both accelerate and disrupt innovation and education within leading research institutions.
Correlated Linguistic Patterns
["SWCNT-OH\/GO membranes" "high magnetoresistance" "magnetic field-boosted superconductors" "blue perovskite LEDs" "AI help or hinder"]
Driving Media Context
Nature.com • Jul 3, 2026

Robust SWCNT-OH/GO membranes for scalable recovery of moxifloxacin from high-salinity organic wastewater

The authors develop a scalable SWCNT-OH-reinforced GO membrane that simultaneously improves moxifloxacin/NaCl separation and water permeability, enabling pil...
Nature.com • Jul 2, 2026

Field angle-independent high magnetoresistance and field angle-dependent coercivity in Fe3GaTe2/Phosphorus all-van der Waals spin valves at room temperature

The authors found that a room temperature magnetoresistance of 103% is achieved in all-van-der-Waals spin valves using Fe3GaTe2 and black phosphorus, and tha...
Nature.com • Jun 29, 2026

Family of magnetic field-boosted superconductors in rhombohedral graphene

Nature - Family of magnetic field-boosted superconductors in rhombohedral graphene
Nature.com • Jun 25, 2026

Publisher Correction: In situ nanocrystal confinement for efficient blue perovskite LEDs

Nature - Publisher Correction: In situ nanocrystal confinement for efficient blue perovskite LEDs
BBC News • Jun 23, 2026

Stanford was their golden ticket - could AI help or hinder that?

The BBC spoke with Stanford University graduates about what they really think about artificial intelligence.
Scientific American • Jun 16, 2026

Farnam Jahanian

The university president on narrowing the time between discovery and societal impact
Scientific American • Jun 16, 2026

Darío Gil

The Department of Energy official discusses what will drive tomorrow’s innovation
Scientific American • Jun 16, 2026

Emery Brown

The computational neuroscientist on how scientists themselves need to better advocate for government support
Scientific American • Jun 16, 2026

Chris Boshoff

The Pfizer executive talks about rekindling the public’s excitement over science
Scientific American • Jun 16, 2026

Mark Kelly

On steering the path forward for research and innovation