An air gun delivers powdered metal organic frameworks, which can hold vaccines, into pig skin during a demonstration May 9 at the University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson.
ELIAS VALVERDE II PHOTOS, DALLAS MORNING NEWS
Graduate students Yalini Wijesundara, left, and Sneha Kumari stand in front of the vaccine air gun May 9 at the University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson.
Graduate student Sneha Kumari loads powdered metal organic frameworks, or MOFs, into the bullet before loading it into the air gun that will deliver the vaccine May 9 at the University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson.
Yalini Wijesundara stared at the air gun sitting in her lab. Her lab director, Jeremiah Gassensmith, had built it in a fi t of pandemic-induced boredom, shooting table salt around his home office. Once lockdown ended, he brought it to his biochemistry lab and asked Wijesundara to find a research purpose for it.
CONCORD — A local nonprofit is rolling out what it calls the largest down payment assistance package in Cabarrus County history, aiming to mak…
An air gun delivers powdered metal organic frameworks, which can hold vaccines, into pig skin during a demonstration May 9 at the University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson.
Graduate students Yalini Wijesundara, left, and Sneha Kumari stand in front of the vaccine air gun May 9 at the University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson.
Graduate student Sneha Kumari loads powdered metal organic frameworks, or MOFs, into the bullet before loading it into the air gun that will deliver the vaccine May 9 at the University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson.