Can Aqueous Zinc or Zinc-Ion Batteries and Pseudocapacitors Provide a Safe Alternative and Much Faster Charging? Lithium Battery Expert Professor Yury Gogotsi Explains in The Philadelphia Inquirer

Can aqueous zinc or zinc-ion batteries and pseudocapacitors provide a safe alternative and much faster charging? 

Lithium battery expert Professor Yury Gogotsi explains in the Philadelphia Inquirer:

https://www.inquirer.com/business/cars-battery-fires-fear-law-suits-gm-bolt-20211031.html?utm_source=email&utm_campaign=edit_social_share_email_traffic&utm_medium=email&utm_content=&utm_term=&int_promo=

Don’t miss out! Tune into the PUZZLE X event 16-18 November

Professor Yury Gogotsi, along with Kostya Novoselov, Paul Weiss and many other top scientists and international business leaders will share their insights on the most promising Frontier Materials for next-generation technologies! 

You can tune in online from 16-18 November to join leading graphene scientists from MIT to Manchester and industry leaders from Hyperloop TT to ZTE who will be there in person.

PUZZLE X event in Barcelona is the first collision grounds of Materials Deep Tech  & UN SDGs for addressing grand challenges of humanity. 

For more information about Puzzle X Event, please visit the following link: https://www.puzzlex.io/program

Professor Yury Gogotsi is in Top 50 of the Stanford List of Highly Cited Researchers

In the latest update of the Stanford List of Highly Cited Researchers published on October 19th, Professor Yury Gogotsi was in top 50 in the world among all disciplines (#44 without self-citations included) and was in top 3 in the nano field based on number of citations in 2020.

The “Stanford List” is the most thorough bibliometric analysis of over 100,000 top-scientists that provides standardized information on citations, h-index, co-authorship adjusted hm-index, citations to papers in different authorship positions and a composite indicator. Separate data are shown for career-long and single year impact. Metrics with and without self-citations and ratio of citations to citing papers are given. Scientists are classified into 22 scientific fields and 176 sub-fields. The selection is based on the top 100,000 by c-score (with and without self-citations) or a percentile rank of 2% or above.

For more information about the Stanford List, please visit the following link: https://elsevier.digitalcommonsdata.com/datasets/btchxktzyw/3