Thursday, August 21, 2025

 

Clean hydrogen’s iridium problem? Solved in an afternoon




New megalibrary accelerates discovery of iridium alternative for hydrogen production




Northwestern University

Nanomaterial megalibrary 

image: 

An artistic interpretation of the new catalytic material performing a reaction to split water.

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Credit: Jin Huang and Siyuan Zuo






For decades, researchers around the world have searched for alternatives to iridium, an extremely rare, incredibly expensive metal used in the production of clean hydrogen fuels. 

Now, a powerful new tool has found one — within a single afternoon.

Invented and developed at Northwestern University, that tool is called a megalibrary. The world’s first nanomaterial “data factory,” each megalibrary contains millions of uniquely designed nanoparticles on one tiny chip. In collaboration with researchers from the Toyota Research Institute (TRI), the team used this technology to discover commercially relevant catalysts for hydrogen production. Then, they scaled up the material and demonstrated it could work within a device — all in record time.

With a megalibrary, scientists rapidly screened vast combinations of four abundant, inexpensive metals — each known for its catalytic performance — to find a new material with performance comparable to iridium. The team discovered a wholly new material that, in laboratory experiments, matched or in some cases even exceeded the performance of commercial iridium-based materials, but at a fraction of the cost.

This discovery doesn’t just make affordable green hydrogen a possibility; it also proves the effectiveness of the new megalibrary approach, which could completely change how researchers find new materials for any number of applications.

The study was published today (Aug. 19) in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS).

“We’ve unleashed arguably the world’s most powerful synthesis tool, which allows one to search the enormous number of combinations available to chemists and materials scientists to find materials that matter,” said Northwestern’s Chad A. Mirkin, the study’s senior author and primary inventor of the megalibrary platform. “In this particular project, we have channeled that capability toward a major problem facing the energy sector. That is: How do we find a material that is as good as iridium but is more plentiful, more available and a lot cheaper? This new tool enabled us to find a promising alternative and to find it rapidly.”

A nanotechnology pioneer, Mirkin is the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry at Northwestern’s Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences; professor of chemical and biological engineering, biomedical engineering and materials science and engineering at the McCormick School of Engineering; and executive director of the International Institute for Nanotechnology. Mirkin co-led the work with Ted Sargent, the Lynn Hopton Davis and Greg Davis Professor of Chemistry at Weinberg, professor of electrical and computer engineering at McCormick and executive director of the Paula M. Trienens Institute for Sustainability and Energy.

‘Not enough iridium in the world’

As the world moves away from fossil fuels and toward decarbonization, affordable green hydrogen has emerged as a critical piece of the puzzle. To produce clean hydrogen energy, scientists have turned to water splitting, a process that uses electricity to split water molecules into their two constituent components — hydrogen and oxygen.

The oxygen part of this reaction, called the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), however, is difficult and inefficient. OER is most effective when scientists use iridium-based catalysts, which have significant disadvantages. Iridium is rare, expensive and often obtained as a byproduct from platinum mining. More valuable than gold, iridium costs nearly $5,000 per ounce.

“There’s not enough iridium in the world to meet all of our projected needs,” Sargent said. “As we think about splitting water to generate alternative forms of energy, there’s not enough iridium from a purely supply standpoint.”

‘Full army deployed on a chip’

Mirkin, who introduced the megalibraries in 2016, decided with Sargent that finding new candidates to replace iridium was a perfect application for his revolutionary tool. While materials discovery is traditionally a slow and daunting task filled with trial and error, megalibraries enable scientists to pinpoint optimal compositions at breakneck speeds.

Each megalibrary is created with arrays of hundreds of thousands of tiny, pyramid-shaped tips to print individual “dots” onto a surface. Each dot contains an intentionally designed mix of metal salts. When heated, the metal salts are reduced to form single nanoparticles, each with a precise composition and size.

“You can think of each tip as a tiny person in a tiny lab,” Mirkin said. “Instead of having one tiny person make one structure at a time, you have millions of people. So, you basically have a full army of researchers deployed on a chip.”

And the winner is…

In the new study, the chip contained 156 million particles, each made from different combinations of ruthenium, cobalt, manganese and chromium. A robotic scanner then assessed how well the most promising particles could perform an OER. Based on these tests, Mirkin and his team selected the best-performing candidates to undergo further testing in the laboratory.

Eventually, one composition stood out: a precise combination of all four metals (Ru52Co33Mn9Cr6 oxide). Multi-metal catalysts are known to elicit synergistic effects that can make them more active than single-metal catalysts.

“Our catalyst actually has a little higher activity than iridium and excellent stability,” Mirkin said. “That’s rare because oftentimes ruthenium is less stable. But the other elements in the composition stabilize ruthenium.”

The ability to screen particles for their ultimate performance is a major new innovation. “For the first time, we were not only able to rapidly screen catalysts, but we saw the best ones performing well in a scaled-up setting,” said Joseph Montoya, a senior staff research scientist at TRI and study co-author.

In long-term tests, the new catalyst operated for more than 1,000 hours with high efficiency and excellent stability in a harsh acidic environment. It is also dramatically cheaper than iridium — about one-sixteenth of the cost.

“There’s lots of work to do to make this commercially viable, but it’s very exciting that we can identify promising catalysts so quickly — not only at the lab scale but for devices,” Montoya said.

Just the beginning

By generating massive high-quality materials datasets, the megalibrary approach also lays the groundwork for using artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning to design the next generation of new materials. Northwestern, TRI and Mattiq, a Northwestern spinout company, have already developed machine learning algorithms to sift through the megalibraries at record speeds.

Mirkin says this is only the beginning. With AI, the approach could scale beyond catalysts to revolutionize materials discovery for virtually any technology, such as batteries, biomedical devices and advanced optical components.

“We’re going to look for all sorts of materials for batteries, fusion and more,” he said. “The world does not use the best materials for its needs. People found the best materials at a certain point in time, given the tools available to them. The problem is that we now have a huge infrastructure built around those materials, and we’re stuck with them. We want to turn that upside down. It’s time to truly find the best materials for every need — without compromise.”

About the study

The study, “Accelerating the pace of oxygen evolution reaction catalyst discovery through megalibraries,” was supported by the Toyota Research Institute, Mattiq and the Army Research Office, a directorate of the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Army Research Laboratory (award number W911NF-23-1-0285). This publication was made possible with the support of The Bioindustrial Manufacturing and Design Ecosystem (BioMADE); the content expressed herein is that of the authors and does not necessarily reflect the views of BioMADE.

This material is based on research sponsored by the Air Force under agreement number FA8650-21-2-5028. The U.S. Government is authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for governmental purposes notwithstanding any copyright notation thereon.

The views and conclusions contained herein are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies or endorsements, either expressed or implied, of the Air Force or the U.S. Government.

KINKY SEX

Earliest evidence discovered of interbreeding between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals



Global Breakthrough in a Prehistoric Cave in Israel:



Tel-Aviv University

The skull of Skhul I child showing cranial curvature typical of Homo sapiens. 

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The skull of Skhul I child showing cranial curvature typical of Homo sapiens.

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Credit: Tel Aviv University






A Scientific First: Early Biological Connections Between Neanderthals and

Homo sapiens

 

Global Breakthrough in a Prehistoric Cave in Israel:

Earliest evidence discovered of interbreeding between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals

 

The skeleton belongs to a five-year-old child who lived 140,000 years ago

 

Research team: “This discovery reveals the world’s earliest known human fossil showing morphological traits of both of these human groups, which until recently were considered two separate human species. The current study shows that the five-year-old child’s skeleton is the result of continuous genetic infiltration from the local—and older—Neanderthal population into the Homo sapiens population.”

 

An international study led by researchers from Tel Aviv University and the French National Centre for Scientific Research provides the first scientific evidence that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens had biological and social relations, and even interbred for the first time, in the Land of Israel. The research team found a combination of Neanderthal and Homo sapiens traits in the skeleton of a five-year-old child discovered about 90 years ago in the Skhul Cave on Mount Carmel. The fossil, estimated to be about 140,000 years old, is the earliest human fossil in the world to display morphological features of both of these human groups, which until recently were considered two separate species. The study was led by Prof. Israel Hershkovitz of the Gray Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences at Tel Aviv University and Anne Dambricourt-Malassé of the French National Centre for Scientific Research. The findings of this historic discovery were published in the journal l’Anthropologie.

Research Video

“Genetic studies over the past decade have shown that these two groups exchanged genes,” explains Prof. Hershkovitz. “Even today, 40,000 years after the last Neanderthals disappeared, part of our genome—2 to 6 percent—is of Neanderthal origin. But these gene exchanges took place much later, between 60,000 to 40,000 years ago. Here, we are dealing with a human fossil that is 140,000 years old. In our study, we show that the child’s skull, which in its overall shape resembles that of Homo sapiens—especially in the curvature of the skull vault—has an intracranial blood supply system, a lower jaw, and an inner ear structure typical of Neanderthals.”

 

For years, Neanderthals were thought to be a group that evolved in Europe, migrating to the Land of Israel only about 70,000 years ago, following the advance of European glaciers. In a groundbreaking 2021 study published in the prestigious journal Science, Prof. Hershkovitz and his colleagues showed that early Neanderthals lived in the Land of Israel as early as 400,000 years ago. This human type, which Prof. Hershkovitz called “Nesher Ramla Homo” (after the archaeological site near the Nesher Ramla factory where it was found), encountered Homo sapiens groups that began leaving Africa about 200,000 years ago—and, according to the current study’s findings, interbred with them. The child from the Skhul Cave is the earliest fossil evidence in the world of the social and biological ties forged between these two populations over thousands of years. The local Neanderthals eventually disappeared when they were absorbed into the Homo sapiens population, much like the later European Neanderthals.

 

The researchers reached these conclusions after conducting a series of advanced tests on the fossil. First, they scanned the skull and jaw using micro-CT technology at the Shmunis Family Anthropology Institute at Tel Aviv University, creating an accurate three-dimensional model from the scans. This enabled them to perform a complex morphological analysis of the anatomical structures (including non-visible structures such as the inner ear) and compare them to various hominid populations. To study the structure of the blood vessels surrounding the brain, they also created an accurate 3D reconstruction of the inside of the skull.

 

“The fossil we studied is the earliest known physical evidence of mating between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens,” says Prof. Hershkovitz. “In 1998, a skeleton of a child was discovered in Portugal that showed traits of both of these human groups. But that skeleton, nicknamed the ‘Lapedo Valley Child,’ dates back to 28,000 years ago—more than 100,000 years after the Skhul child. Traditionally, anthropologists have attributed the fossils discovered in the Skhul Cave, along with fossils from the Qafzeh Cave near Nazareth, to an early group of Homo sapiens. The current study reveals that at least some of the fossils from the Skhul Cave are the result of continuous genetic infiltration from the local—and older—Neanderthal population into the Homo sapiens population.”

 

Link to the article:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003552125000366?via%3Dihub

 

Social media videos could boost HIV prevention among teens and young adults





Boston Children's Hospital






Written by: Jacqueline Mitchell 

Adolescents and young adults say they want to learn about HIV prevention the same way they learn about new tunes, life hacks, and the latest slang — on social media, according to a new led by physician-scientists at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and Boston Children’s Hospital. Participants in the study, published in Patient and Education Counseling, responded best to short informational videos that were positive and pro-active, rather than negative or fear-based, the investigators found.

The scientists used behavioral economics principles to test how message framing affects how young people respond to information about HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a daily pill or long-acting injection that can reduce the risk of contracting HIV by up to 99 percent. More than 6,400 U.S. teens and young adults 13-24 contracted HIV in 2022, accounting for about one in five of all new infections.

“PrEP is a highly effective intervention for prevention of HIV and has been approved for adolescents and young adults since 2018, but, unfortunately, use among those aged 13-24 continues to be the lowest, despite the need,” said senior author Douglas Krakower, MD, an associate professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at BIDMC. “One barrier to use is this age group is their limited knowledge of PrEP. To end the HIV epidemic, we need educational strategies specifically tailored to their developmental stage.”

To explore how best to bridge that knowledge gap, Krakower and colleagues — including corresponding author Carly E. Guss, MD, MPH, an attending physician, in the Division of Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital — created two short social-media-style videos: one with gain-framed messaging, which focused on the benefits of taking PrEP, and one with loss-framed messaging, which emphasized the risks of not using it.

Thirty young people, ages 15–25, recruited from centers in Boston, Michigan and Los Angeles, watched both videos and shared their thoughts in video meeting-based focus groups. Most had limited experience with PrEP; only a third had ever been tested for HIV, and more than a third felt they personally didn’t need it. More than half (53 percent) preferred the gain-framed version of the videos. They said the positive tone, emphasis on PrEP’s high efficacy, and clear, memorable visuals made the message more appealing.

Participants favored videos that felt authentic and relatable and said they would trust the content more if shown in a doctor’s office. Many said the videos would prompt them to seek more information online or from a healthcare provider.

The findings suggest that public health campaigns aiming to reach youth should combine social media distribution with in-clinic viewing, use positive framing, and involve young people in content development. The study’s authors say the findings can guide public health professionals looking to reach young audiences with HIV prevention messages. Their recommendations: use social media platforms like TikTok and Instagram, favor positive messages over fear-based ones, keep the tone authentic, and involve young people in the content development process.

“We found that teens and young adults want to use social media to educate themselves about sexual health, but most videos on TikTok are created by users themselves, not educational entities or health care providers, ” said Krakower, also a research scientist at The Fenway Institute and an associate professor in medicine and population medicine at Harvard Medical School. “To ensure that accurate healthcare information is reaching adolescents and young adults, departments of public health and healthcare centers should expand educational outreach to include TikTok campaigns posted on official accounts and also shown in waiting rooms, or working with social media influencers to create videos that are authentic, trustworthy, and relevant to this population.”

As the participants were predominately white and cis gendered, the researchers note that future studies should include more diverse populations, particularly groups most at risk for HIV. Still, the message is clear: to reach young people with life-saving HIV prevention tools, meet them where they are—online.

Co-authors included Brittany Gluskin and Danielle DeMaio of Boston Children’s Hospital; and Lauren Wisk of David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

This work was supported by the NIH (grant 5P30AI060354-19); the Harvard University Center for AIDS Research (CFAR), an NIH funded program (P30 AI060354), which is supported by the following NIH Co-Funding and Participating Institutes and Centers: NIAID, NCI, NICHD, NIDCR, NHLBI, NIDA, NIMH, NIA, NIDDK, NINR, NIMHD, FIC, and OAR.

Krakower has conducted research with grants from Gilead and Merck to his institution, received personal funds from Medacape and UptoDate, Inc. to develop medical education content, and had travel funded by PrEP4All to attend a conference on a national PrEP program. All other authors declare no competing interests.

 

Improving preparation instructions can help combat deadly bacteria in powdered baby formula



Cornell University





ITHACA, N.Y. — Cornell researchers recommend modifications to the instructions for preparing bottles of powdered infant formula to ensure safety against rare foodborne bacteria.

The findings, published in the Journal of Food Protection, reveal how the current instructions for reconstituting powdered formula are ambiguous and can fail to protect against the bacteria.

Cronobacter infections are of concern for high-risk infants, defined as babies under 2 months of age, preemies, and those who are immunocompromised. When powdered formula is contaminated with the bacteria, it can cause septicemia, meningitis, and death. Cronobacter cases are rare, with an estimated 18 cases occurring annually in the U.S.

Previous studies have shown that water heated to 158 degrees Fahrenheit (70 Celsius) can kill the bacteria. The problem occurs when the instructions on package labels for formula preparation do not advise parents to measure the temperature or specify when to check it.

“Some of the guidance just says boil and wait five minutes, which is not a temperature at all,” said Abigail Snyder, associate professor of microbial food safety and corresponding author on the paper.

The study finds that first pouring boiled water into a bottle, then using a thermometer to monitor the temperature until it cools to 165°F helps ensure the water is at the right temperature. At that point, adding the powdered formula, shaking to mix, and waiting one minute allows the heat to kill any Cronobacter bacteria. After that, the bottle can be actively cooled (such as, by placing it under running water) to get it to body temperature before feeding.

The paper acknowledges the challenges of caring for a newborn and the added burden of precise formula preparation. Research reveals that the risk of Cronobacter infections drop after an infant reaches 8 weeks of age. So, the window of time in which caregivers must complete these extra steps is a relatively small period in a baby’s life.

The research was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

For additional information, read this Cornell Chronicle story.

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How federal and provincial support programs are excluding Canadians with cognitive disabilities



Study shows 90% of disability programs tested present barriers to accessing adequate eligibility and enrollment information



University of Ottawa






Open Collaboration for Cognitive Accessibility (Open) has published a policy brief presenting key recommendations for improving the clarity and availability of information on federal and provincial disability support programs, such as the new Canada Disability Benefit. The policy brief is based on a study of 19 different federal and provincial disability support programs across all provinces. Full study findings will be revealed in a forthcoming research report, currently under peer review.

The policy brief outlines key recommendations policy makers and program administrators should adopt in order to improve the availability of disability program information and enrollment for the benefit of Canadians who experience cognitive disabilities, currently estimated to be around 5 million people.

The research study involved evaluation of 19 financial support programs across Canada that offer direct compensation to adults with a disability. Specifically, it examined:

1. Ease of access to program information by potentially eligible citizens

2. Clarity of eligibility and payment rules governing each financial support

 

Each program was evaluated on the amount of effort required by potential applicants to obtain adequate information necessary for decision making and/or enrollment. The study excluded programs that do not offer direct payments or financial support.

"We were surprised to find that only 2 of the 19 programs evaluated had key information readily available online," remarked Emily Cliche, Research Coordinator at Open Collaboration for Cognitive Accessibility. "We were especially shocked given that Canada’s Access to Information Act mandates that information of this nature be made accessible."

Results of the study indicate that the multitude of accessibility barriers presented by these support programs is likely preventing tens of thousands of Canadians with disabilities—including cognitive disabilities—from obtaining the financial support for which they're eligible.

"I was personally struck by how difficult it was to reach program administrators directly," added Cliche. "It often took multiple emails and phone calls just to connect with someone who could provide the necessary information, which creates additional barriers for users, especially those with cognitive disabilities."

 

Another unexpected study finding was the dizzying array of financial support program options available to Canadians with disabilities, even within the same province. In British Columbia, for example, one program offered $1,060 per month, while another provided up to $1,728.50. The study also revealed a radical disparity between support levels offered across different provinces. The lowest amount of support came from Newfoundland and Labrador’s Personal Allowance at $150 per month, while Alberta’s Living Allowance was the highest, at $1,863 per month. These options and disparities can be especially challenging for citizens with cognitive disabilities to identify, understand and navigate.

"When offering support programs to adults with disabilities, it’s essential to recognize the systemic barriers that make access more difficult, such as the lack of available information," explained Dr. Munazza Tahir, Associate Director at Open Collaboration for Cognitive Accessibility. "Making information about financial support programs easy to find, understand and action is a key step toward reducing financial exclusion and improving access to adequate support for Canadians of all levels of cognitive abilities. This study should be an urgent call to action for program administrators."

The policy brief comes at a time when the Government of Canada is rolling out their new Canada Disability Benefit program. Administered by Service Canada, it aims to combat economic and social exclusion faced by low-income Canadians with disabilities aged 18 to 64 with up to $2,400 per year. First payments from this program were expected to be made in July 2025.

"As most provinces and the federal government are currently implementing accessibility standards, it is critical that they make sure information about disability support programs are easily available to Canadians," urged Open's Executive Director, Dr. Virginie Cobigo, research director and full professor at the University of Ottawa. "There is no accessibility without access."

The policy brief is available here: https://openaccessibility.ca/policy-brief-disability-funding-support-programs/  

# # #

About Open Collaboration for Cognitive Accessibility

Based in Ottawa, Open Collaboration for Cognitive Accessibility is a Canadian social enterprise pairing persons with cognitive disabilities with organizations aiming to make products, services and experiences accessible to everyone. Established in 2020 by Dr. Virginie Cobigo, through a partnership with the University of Ottawa, Open provides cognitive accessibility solutions and training, and neuroinclusive research and development to public and private sector organizations around the world.

https://www.openaccessibility.ca/  

 

Media contact:
media@uottawa.ca