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![]() Greenbelt, MD (SPX) Nov 11, 2011 NASA engineers have produced a material that absorbs on average more than 99 percent of the ultraviolet, visible, infrared, and far-infrared light that hits it - a development that promises to open new frontiers in space technology. The team of engineers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., reported their findings recently at the SPIE Optics and Photonics conference, the largest interdisciplinary technical meeting in this discipline. The team has since reconfirmed the mat ... read more |
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![]() Hey bacterial slime get off of my boat Submerge it and they will come. Opportunistic seaweed, barnacles, and bacterial films can quickly befoul almost any underwater surface, but researchers are now using advances in nanotechnology and m ... more | .. |
![]() Berkeley Lab Researchers Ink Nanostructures with Tiny 'Soldering Iron' Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have shed light on the role of temperature in controlling a fabrication technique for draw ... more | .. |
![]() Study compares techniques for doping graphene for device and interconnect fabrication Nanotechnology researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have conducted the first direct comparison of two fundamental techniques that could be used for chemically doping sheets of two-dime ... more | .. |
Amazon takes on iPad with new Kindle Fire tablet Hong Kong to restrict foreign homebuyers from 2013 US judge OKs partial settlement in e-book case Nordic-Baltic states seek more cooperation Outside View: Jobs outlook grim Empire-style computers? Frenchman takes PCs to lap of luxury Google-Microsoft field smartphones to take on iPhone 5 EU businesses urge China's new leaders to speed reforms |
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![]() Scientists carve nanowires out of ultrananocrystalline diamond thin films A team of scientists working at Argonne National Laboratory's (ANL) Center for Nanoscale Materials has successfully carved ultrananocrystalline diamond (UNCD) thin films into nanowires, boosting the ... more | .. |
![]() The secrets of tunneling through energy barriers Electrons moving in graphene behave in an unusual way, as demonstrated by 2010 Nobel Prize laureates for physics Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, who performed transport experiments on this one- ... more | .. |
![]() Nano-tech makes medicine greener Researchers at the University of Copenhagen are behind the development of a new method that will make it possible to develop drugs faster and greener. This will lead to cheaper medicine for consumer ... more | .. |
![]() EADS, Rusnano team on nanotechnology European aerospace and defense group EADS and Russian Nanotechnology Corp. will cooperate in the research and development of new technologies. ... more |
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![]() Graphene grows better on certain copper crystals New observations could improve industrial production of high-quality graphene, hastening the era of graphene-based consumer electronics, thanks to University of Illinois engineers. By combinin ... more | .. |
![]() Improved characterization of nanoparticle clusters for EHS and biosensors research The tendency of nanoparticles to clump together in solution-"agglomeration"-is of great interest because the size of the clusters plays an important role in the behavior of the materials. Toxicity, ... more | .. |
![]() Magnetic Nanoswitch for Thermoelectric Voltages The heat which occurs in tiny computer processors might soon be no longer useless or even a problem. On the contrary: It could be used to switch these processors more easily or to store data more ef ... more | .. |
![]() Nanotubes Key to Microscopic Mechanics In the latest issue of Elsevier's Materials, researchers from Spain and Belgium reported on the innovative use of carbon nanotubes to create mechanical components for use in a new generation of micr ... more |
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![]() Nanoparticles and their size may not be big issues If you've ever eaten from silverware or worn copper jewelry, you've been in a perfect storm in which nanoparticles were dropped into the environment, say scientists at the University of Oregon. ... more | .. |
![]() Stanford researchers build transparent, super-stretchy skin-like sensor Imagine having skin so supple you could stretch it out to more than twice its normal length in any direction - repeatedly - yet it would always snap back completely wrinkle-free when you let go of i ... more | .. |
![]() Lockheed Martin Begins GeoEye-2 Satellite Integration Lockheed Martin has announced that it will begin integration of GeoEye's next-generation, high-resolution Earth-imaging satellite, known as GeoEye-2, with the planned delivery of its integrated prop ... more | .. |
![]() Scientists develop new nanomaterial that 'steers' current in multiple dimensions Scientists at Northwestern University have developed a new nanomaterial that can "steer" electrical currents. The development could lead to a computer that can simply reconfigure its internal wiring ... more |
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![]() Researchers Discover Material with Graphene-Like Properties After the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to two scientists in 2010 who had studied the material graphene, this substance has received a lot of attention. Together with colleagues from Korea, Dr. ... more | .. |
![]() UBC researchers invent tiny artificial muscles with the strength, flexibility of elephant trunk An international team of researchers has invented new artificial muscles strong enough to rotate objects a thousand times their own weight, but with the same flexibility of an elephant's trunk or oc ... more | .. |
![]() Iowa State, Ames Lab physicist says nanoparticle assembly is like building with LEGOs New processes that allow nanoparticles to assemble themselves into designer materials could solve some of today's technology challenges, Alex Travesset of Iowa State University and the Ames Laborato ... more | .. |
![]() Frustration Inspires New Form of Graphene As Researchers Find Promise in Crumpling They're the building block of graphite - ultra-thin sheets of carbon, just one atom thick, whose discovery was lauded in 2010 with a Nobel Prize in Physics. The seemingly simple material is gr ... more |
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![]() Emulating and surpassing nature Nature is a master builder. Using a bottom-up approach, nature takes tiny atoms and, through chemical bonding, makes crystalline materials, like diamonds, silicon and even table salt. In all of them ... more | .. |
![]() Boston College Researchers discover two early stages of carbon nanotube growth Boston College researchers have discovered two early-stage phases of carbon nanotube growth during plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition, finding a disorderly tangle of tube growth that ultimate ... more | .. |
![]() Mirage-effect helps researchers hide objects Scientists have created a working cloaking device that not only takes advantage of one of nature's most bizarre phenomenon, but also boasts unique features; it has an 'on and off' switch and is best ... more | .. |
![]() New technique maps twin faces of smallest Janus nanoparticles New drug delivery systems, solar cells, industrial catalysts and video displays are among the potential applications of special particles that possess two chemically distinct sides. These particles ... more |
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![]() Rice University lab develops technique to control light from nanoparticles A nanoscale game of "now you see it, now you don't" may contribute to the creation of metamaterials with useful optical properties that can be actively controlled, according to scientists at Rice Un ... more | .. |
![]() How Graphene's Electrical Properties Can Be Tuned An accidental discovery in a physicist's laboratory at the University of California, Riverside provides a unique route for tuning the electrical properties of graphene, nature's thinnest elastic mat ... more | .. |
![]() Hydrogen released to fuel cell more quickly when stored in metal nanoparticles Researchers from TU Delft and VU University Amsterdam in the Netherlands have demonstrated that the size of a metal alloy nanoparticle influences the speed with which hydrogen gas is released when s ... more | .. |
![]() Rensselaer engineers 'cook' promising new heat-harvesting nanomaterials in microwave oven Waste heat is a byproduct of nearly all electrical devices and industrial processes, from driving a car to flying an aircraft or operating a power plant. Engineering researchers at Rensselaer Polyte ... more |
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![]() Researchers use carbon nanotubes to make solar cells affordable, flexible Researchers from Northwestern University have developed a carbon-based material that could revolutionize the way solar power is harvested. The new solar cell material - a transparent conductor made ... more | .. |
![]() New nanostructure-based process will streamline production of magnetic materials Scientists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst report that for the first time they have designed a much simpler method of preparing ordered magnetic materials than ever before, by coupling ma ... more | .. |
![]() Stanford engineers create nanoscale nonlinear light source Not long after the development of the first laser in 1960 scientists discovered that shining a beam through certain crystals produced light of a different color; more specifically, it produced light ... more | .. |
![]() Scientists observe how superconducting nanowires lose resistance-free state Even with today's invisibility cloaks, people can't walk through walls. But, when paired together, millions of electrons can. The electrons perform this trick, called macroscopic quantum tunne ... more |
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