
Bharath A G
3.8K posts

Bharath A G
@agbharath
@UTAustin @UBC @CUBoulder Passionate about materials, physics & nature via Math. Interested in art & economics. @ChelseaFC is my love.


Through the development of metal–organic frameworks, 2025 chemistry laureates Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson and Omar Yaghi have provided chemists with new opportunities for solving some of the challenges we face. Following the laureates’ groundbreaking discoveries, researchers have created numerous different and functional metal–organic frameworks (MOF). So far, in most cases, the materials have only been used on a small scale. To harness the benefits of MOF materials for humanity, many companies are now investing in their mass production and commercialisation. Some have succeeded. For example, the electronics industry can now use MOF materials to contain some of the toxic gases required to produce semiconductors. Another MOF can instead break down harmful gases, including some that can be used as chemical weapons. Numerous companies are also testing materials that can capture carbon dioxide from factories and power stations, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Some researchers believe that metal–organic frameworks have such huge potential that they will be the material of the twenty-first century. #NobelPrize








Ivo Babuška, professor emeritus @OdenInstitute @UTAustin who made pioneering contributions in mathematics, applied mathematics, numerical methods and computational mechanics, dies at 97. @UTAustinNews oden.utexas.edu/news-and-event…


















