To forge a pioneering project in nanoscience, chemistry and circular economy, Carla Casadevall was inspired by how plants solve the oldest energy problem: turning sunlight, water and CO2 into energy-rich molecules. Her research group aspires to replicate the mechanism, but improving it. “Nature takes us advantage. It has had millions of years to evolve. But we can do more efficient and selective systems,” she explains in an interview with El Per…
This story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.
To forge a pioneering project in nanoscience, chemistry and circular economy, Carla Casadevall was inspired by how plants solve the oldest energy problem: turning sunlight, water and CO2 into energy-rich molecules. Her research group aspires to replicate the mechanism, but improving it. “Nature takes us advantage. It has had millions of years to evolve. But we can do more efficient and selective systems,” she explains in an interview with El Per…