LINX Projects
Degradation of permanent magnets
The durability of magnets used in permanent magnet motor technology is important for the long-term performance of products. The LINX team at Aarhus University studies the degradation of permanent magnets in aqueous media and at elevated temperatures.
Structure and dynamics of food materials
Food products are both soft materials and structured materials, and the scattering of X-rays and neutrons is used by the University of Copenhagen to advance the tools accessible to the Danish food industry.
The Road to New Drug Targets
Discovery of new drugs is crucial to our well-being and society. Aarhus University helps develop a state-of-the-art toolbox through X-ray diffraction.
Ultra-Fast Structural ID of Drugs
The molecular structure of drugs determines how they work. LINX investigates quicker structural ID to aid innovation in the pharma industry.
Nano-Materials Seen from Inside
Though unnoticed, nanomaterials are crucial to modern technology. Aarhus University develops state-of-the-art methods to analyse them "bottom up".
Getting structures from data
To determine structures from increasingly complex systems is demanding computationally. The University of Copenhagen are developing tools to model complex macromolecules.