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Articles

January 2026

Aluminium foil supporting solar particle research around Mars

Aluminium foil supporting solar particle research around Mars

Researchers working on a Mars mission instrument have shown how a compact silicon detector can distinguish different types of solar particles in space. The study also documents the use of high-purity aluminium foil supplied by Advent Research Materials as part of the experimental setup. The work focuses on SP@M (Solar Particles @ Mars), an instrument designed to measure energetic particles produced by the Sun and travelling through the Martian space environment.

Case study | Silver wire for grounding in optophysiology and Neuropixels recordings in vivo

Case study | Silver wire for grounding in optophysiology and Neuropixels recordings in vivo

Optogenetic stimulation lets researchers probe how brain circuits function in living animals by delivering light to a target region and recording neuronal responses. This STAR Protocols paper addresses a known complication. Optical stimulation in mice can unintentionally activate endogenous retinal opsins, producing off-target responses that propagate to the cortex and risk confounding experimental interpretation.

Hastelloy C-276® in advanced energy and superconducting research

Hastelloy C-276® in advanced energy and superconducting research

Hastelloy C-276 is widely used where corrosion resistance and high-temperature stability matter. This article looks at why researchers also specify precision C-276 foil and strip as a substrate in high temperature superconducting tape development, and how surface finish, thickness control, and mechanical stability support thin film coating processes. It also outlines where these substrate foils are used across energy research, power systems, medical imaging magnets, and advanced electronics.

Case Study | Improving hormone sensing with niobium wire microelectrodes

Case Study | Improving hormone sensing with niobium wire microelectrodes

Niobium wire supplied by Advent was used as the core conductor in thin-film microelectrodes developed to improve electrochemical sensing in neuroscience research. The study reports stronger detection signals for tryptophan, tyrosine and the peptide hormone GnRH, including measurements in mouse brain tissue, and points to a practical route for building high-performance microelectrodes for lab research.

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