The word "material design" is not a coincidence in the least. Fundamentally, the goal of material design is to create designs that, while remaining somewhat abstract, mimic the real world and its things. You don't want to make your design appear extremely realistic to the extent that it mimics the actual counterpart of a certain aspect. However, what you really want to do is make sure the consumer understands what "material" means. In other words, the material design draws inspiration from the actual world and develops a new visual language that matches some of the world's characteristics. The problem is this. Humans have an understanding of materials. We are familiar with the feel of metal and the appearance of a wooden desk.
Title : A proposal of chemical sensor based on polycrystalline Cu2O nanofilm
Paulo Cesar De Morais, Catholic University of Brasilia, Brazil
Title : Plant-mediated synthesis of silver nanoparticles and zinc oxide nanoparticles and application of AgNPs for the development of antimicrobial biopolymer films in food packaging
Garva Anup Karmarkar, Vishwakarma Institute of Technology, India
Title : Thermodynamic analysis of a combined modified Kalina–GT-MHR cycle with porous medium effects
Rakesh Manilal Harjivandas Patel, Government Science College, Gandhinagar, India
Title : Non-newtonian rheology on curved circular squeeze films using the Rabinowitsch fluid model
Rakesh Manilal Harjivandas Patel, Government Science College, Gandhinagar, India
Title : Ferrofluid mediated synthesis of nanomagnetic polymer materials in supercritical fluids
M G H Zaidi, G B Pant University of Agriculture & Technology, India
Title : Shape memory phenomena and twinning-detwinning reactions and crystallographic transformations in shape memory alloys
Osman Adiguzel, Firat University, Turkey