nanoseaweed

English

Etymology

From nano- +‎ seaweed, named for its appearance.

Noun

nanoseaweed (uncountable)

  1. An extremely thin nanosheet of gold.
    • 2019 August 6, Ashley Strickland, “Scientists just created the world’s thinnest gold and it’s two atoms thick”, in CNN[1]:
      Researchers are calling it gold nanoseaweed because of its shape.
    • 2019 August 6, “Scientists create the world's thinnest gold”, in Phys.org[2], archived from the original on 6 July 2024, page 5:
      Images taken from an electron microscope reveal the way the gold atoms have formed into a highly organised lattice. Other images show gold nanoseaweed that has been artificially coloured.
    • 2020 September 17, Samuel Charles Tensin Moorcroft, “Light-responsive delivery and photothermal enhancement of antimicrobial peptides to combat bacterial wound infections”, in University of Leeds School of Physics & Astronomy[3], page 131:
      This was demonstrated through the inclusion of gold nanoseaweed into the gel at varying concentrations, Figure 6.5C.