Daily Briefing

Wednesday, 11 March 2026

15 stories
A Small-Molecule Fix Upgrades Efficiency in Inverted Perovskite Solar Cells
Lead StoryChemistry & Material Science

A Small-Molecule Fix Upgrades Efficiency in Inverted Perovskite Solar Cells

Researchers have improved the efficiency and stability of solar devices by swapping a bulky polymer for a compact molecule. This chemical tweak repairs surface defects on nickel oxide layers, boosting energy conversion to nearly 21 per cent.

Global Analysis

Image for AI and Nanomedicine Target the Flaws in Photodynamic Therapy
Medicine & Health

AI and Nanomedicine Target the Flaws in Photodynamic Therapy

Researchers are combining artificial intelligence with nanomedicine to upgrade how light-activated cancer treatments function. By targeting cellular recycling mechanisms, this proposed framework could overcome the biological resistance that limits current therapies.

Image for How Crystal Conformations Dictate Colour in Room-temperature phosphorescent materials
Chemistry & Material Science

How Crystal Conformations Dictate Colour in Room-temperature phosphorescent materials

Researchers have successfully isolated two distinct crystal forms of a persulfurated benzene that emit different colours of light. By analysing the molecular conformations, the study demonstrates how solid-state organisation directly controls the emission properties of purely organic materials.

Image for How Machine Learning is Advancing Brain Age Prediction
Neuroscience

How Machine Learning is Advancing Brain Age Prediction

Researchers have processed 40,000 functional MRI scans to explore the best ways to calculate the biological age of the brain. By evaluating different machine learning strategies to handle this complex data, they hope to open the way for more reliable early detection of neurodegenerative diseases.

Image for Machine learning infectious disease diagnosis: How algorithms spot the flu at the border
Medicine & Health

Machine learning infectious disease diagnosis: How algorithms spot the flu at the border

Researchers have developed an AI model that diagnoses the flu in international travellers with 93 per cent accuracy. By combining physical symptoms with global infection rates and travel history, algorithms can spot imported viruses faster.

Image for Nanopore detection advances: Combining pressure and electric fields to identify elusive molecules
Chemistry & Material Science

Nanopore detection advances: Combining pressure and electric fields to identify elusive molecules

Researchers have improved the sensitivity of solid-state sensors by combining physical pressure and electric fields to push low-charge particles through microscopic gaps. This dual-force method succeeds where traditional voltage-only techniques fail, offering a more reliable way to identify complex biological molecules.

Image for Nanotechnology Enables the First Chemical Strategy for Ticagrelor Reversal
Chemistry & Material Science

Nanotechnology Enables the First Chemical Strategy for Ticagrelor Reversal

Researchers have developed a targeted gold nanoparticle that selectively neutralises the blood thinner Ticagrelor. This advance offers a reliable way to stop severe bleeding in emergency situations and provides a new framework for designing smart nanomaterials.

Image for Rewiring Chemistry: How Aliovalent Substitution Upgrades Metal-organic frameworks
Chemistry & Material Science

Rewiring Chemistry: How Aliovalent Substitution Upgrades Metal-organic frameworks

Researchers have systematically analysed how swapping ions with different electrical charges alters the fundamental properties of highly porous materials. This specific chemical technique allows scientists to precisely tune structures for targeted industrial applications.

Image for The Economics of Sustainable Biofuels: Why Targeted Policies Beat Broad Mandates
Environmental Science

The Economics of Sustainable Biofuels: Why Targeted Policies Beat Broad Mandates

A recent analysis evaluates 25 years of biofuel policy, concluding that broad subsidies for crop-based fuels have yielded mixed environmental results. By shifting focus to waste biomass and strict lifecycle-emissions standards, regulators could push the industry toward more viable applications like aviation.

Image for The Future of Dry Eye Disease Treatments: Balancing Clinical Data and Patient Comfort
Medicine & Health

The Future of Dry Eye Disease Treatments: Balancing Clinical Data and Patient Comfort

A new meta-analysis reveals that while two major dry eye medications heal the physical surface of the eye equally well, one provides significantly better subjective comfort. This data provides a clearer path for targeted ocular therapies over the next decade.

Image for The Secret Stability of Akkermansia muciniphila: A Microbe Built for the Long Haul
Genetics & Molecular Biology

The Secret Stability of Akkermansia muciniphila: A Microbe Built for the Long Haul

Researchers grew a beneficial gut bacterium for over 1,000 generations and found it barely mutates. This astonishing genetic stability suggests it could be safely mass-produced for human gut health treatments.

Image for The Silent Cinema of the Mind: A New Era in Brain Image Reconstruction
Neuroscience

The Silent Cinema of the Mind: A New Era in Brain Image Reconstruction

Scientists have successfully extracted moving video directly from the visual cortex of mice by recording the activity of individual cells. By decoding these microscopic neural flashes, researchers can recreate what the animal sees with remarkable clarity.

Image for The Silent War in Our Bread: Enter CRISPR Low Gluten Wheat
Genetics & Molecular Biology

The Silent War in Our Bread: Enter CRISPR Low Gluten Wheat

By combining RNA interference and CRISPR gene editing, scientists have successfully engineered wheat with a 70 percent reduction in the proteins that trigger gluten-related disorders. The modified plants maintain their bread-making qualities, offering a potential agricultural solution for widespread food sensitivities.

Image for The Twisted Light Problem: Solving the Paradox of Circularly polarized luminescence
Chemistry & Material Science

The Twisted Light Problem: Solving the Paradox of Circularly polarized luminescence

Researchers have overcome a frustrating optical trade-off by forcing fluorescent carbon nanoparticles into microscopic, spiral-shaped moulds. This physical confinement produces intensely bright, highly twisted light, offering a sustainable method for developing advanced optical technologies and encryption tools.

Image for Why Chronic Hypoparathyroidism Makes Your Brain Feel Stuck, and the Search for a Reboot
Neuroscience

Why Chronic Hypoparathyroidism Makes Your Brain Feel Stuck, and the Search for a Reboot

Researchers used magnetic brain stimulation to find that chronic hypoparathyroidism impairs brain plasticity. Excitingly, early pilot data suggests long-term hormone replacement therapy might help restore this flexibility, though its exact effect on symptoms needs more study.