24/7 News Coverage
October 24, 2013
NANO TECH
Nano-Cone Textures Generate Extremely "Robust" Water-Repellent Surfaces
Upton NY (SPX) Oct 24, 2013
When it comes to designing extremely water-repellent surfaces, shape and size matter. That's the finding of a group of scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, who investigated the effects of differently shaped, nanoscale textures on a material's ability to force water droplets to roll off without wetting its surface. These findings and the methods used to fabricate such materials-published online October 21, 2013, in Advanced Materials-are highly relevant for ... read more
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NANO TECH

Scientists untangle nanotubes to release their potential in the electronics industry
Researchers have demonstrated how to produce electronic inks for the development of new applications using the 'wonder material', carbon nanotubes. Carbon nanotubes are lightweight, strong and ... more
NANO TECH

Newly discovered mechanism propels micromotors
Scientists studying the behavior of platinum particles immersed in hydrogen peroxide may have discovered a new way to propel microscopic machines. The new mechanism is described in The Journal of Ch ... more
TECH SPACE

How to make ceramics that bend without breaking
Ceramics are not known for their flexibility: they tend to crack under stress. But researchers from MIT and Singapore have just found a way around that problem - for very tiny objects, at least. ... more
Nano Technology News from NanoDaily.com


NANO TECH

Densest array of carbon nanotubes grown to date
Carbon nanotubes' outstanding mechanical, electrical and thermal properties make them an alluring material to electronics manufacturers. However, until recently scientists believed that growing the ... more


NANO TECH

Nanoscale neuronal activity measured for the first time
A new technique that allows scientists to measure the electrical activity in the communication junctions of the nervous systems has been developed by a researcher at Queen Mary University of London. ... more
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CubeSats, SmallSats and MicroSats
NANO TECH

Container's material properties affect the viscosity of water at the nanoscale
Water pours into a cup at about the same rate regardless of whether the water bottle is made of glass or plastic. But at nanometer-size scales for water and potentially other fluids, whether t ... more
NANO TECH

Molecules pass through nanotubes at size-dependent speeds
Like a pea going through a straw, tiny molecules can pass through microscopic cylinders known as nanotubes. This could potentially be used to select molecules according to size - for example, to pur ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Relief coming for Europe after brutal heatwave
Japan updates 'megaquake' preparedness plan
Fiji says would not welcome China military presence in Pacific
NANO TECH

Breakthrough in sensing at the nanoscale
Researchers have made a breakthrough discovery in identifying the world's most sensitive nanoparticle and measuring it from a distance using light. These super-bright, photostable and background-fre ... more
NANO TECH

Accidental nanoparticle discovery could hail revolution in manufacturing
A nanoparticle shaped like a spiky ball, with magnetic properties, has been uncovered in a new method of synthesising carbon nanotubes by physicists at Queen Mary University of London and the Univer ... more
NANO TECH

Airbrushing Could Facilitate Large-Scale Manufacture of Carbon Nanofibers
Researchers from North Carolina State University used airbrushing techniques to grow vertically aligned carbon nanofibers on several different metal substrates, opening the door for incorporating th ... more
Space Situational Awareness Conference 2013

Solar systems for home and business
Solar systems for home and business


Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison & Memory Foam Mattress Review

Training Space Professionals Since 1970
NANO TECH

Motorised microscopic matchsticks move in water with sense of direction
Chemists, physicists and computer scientists at the University of Warwick have come together to devise a new powerful and very versatile way of controlling the speed and direction of motion of micro ... more
NANO TECH

Functioning 'mechanical gears' seen in nature for the first time
The juvenile Issus - a plant-hopping insect found in gardens across Europe - has hind-leg joints with curved cog-like strips of opposing 'teeth' that intermesh, rotating like mechanical gears to syn ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Tianwen 2 captures Earth and moon from deep space on asteroid mission
Venus atmosphere mapped over a decade using Himawari satellite data
China launches international association to boost global access to deep space research
NANO TECH

Researchers produce nanostructures with potential to advance energy devices
New types of nanostructures have shown promise for applications in electrochemically powered energy devices and systems, including advanced battery technologies. One process for making these nanostr ... more
NANO TECH

Researchers figure out how to 'grow' carbon nanotubes with specific atomic structures
Move over, silicon. In a breakthrough in the quest for the next generation of computers and materials, researchers at USC have solved a longstanding challenge with carbon nanotubes: how to actually ... more
TECH SPACE

Indiana Jones meets George Jetson
A team of researchers from Uppsala University in Sweden has designed a microplasma source capable of exciting matter in a controlled, efficient way. This miniature device may find use in a wide rang ... more
TECH SPACE
Space ballooning: 20-mile-high flights offered for $75K

Two feared dead as fighter jet crashes in Switzerland

Boeing Begins Assembling 3rd KC-46A Tanker Aircraft


TECH SPACE
Is China Challenging the Space Security

NASA's China policy faces mounting pressure

Ten Years of Chinese Astronauts


TECH SPACE
Taiwan to strengthen bid to stop Chinese spying: report

Britain may hire hackers for cyber-defence

'Thousands' of N. Korea cyber attacks on South: ministry data


TECH SPACE
Russia switches Greenpeace piracy charge to 'hooliganism'

US power plant pollution declines 10 percent from 2010

Firms eye power generation in post-Fukushima Japan

CHIP TECH

Engineers improve electronic devices using molybdenum disulfide
A Kansas State University chemical engineer has discovered that a new member of the ultrathin materials family has great potential to improve electronic and thermal devices. Vikas Berry, Willi ... more
NANO TECH

Size Matters as Nanocrystals Go Through Phases
Understanding what happens to a material as it undergoes phase transformations - changes from a solid to a liquid to a gas or a plasma - is of fundamental scientific interest and critical for optimi ... more
NANO TECH

New breakthrough for structural characterization of metal nanoparticles
Researchers at the Xiamen University in China and the University of Jyvaskyla in Finland have characterized a series of stable 1.5 nm metal nanoclusters containing 44 metal atoms, stabilized by 30 o ... more
NANO TECH

Toxic nanoparticles might be entering human food supply
Over the last few years, the use of nanomaterials for water treatment, food packaging, pesticides, cosmetics and other industries has increased. For example, farmers have used silver nanoparticles a ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Iran supends cooperation with UN nuclear watchdog
Rocket Lab clears key design milestone for SDA low Earth orbit constellation
US halting some shipments of military aid to Ukraine
NANO TECH

Plasma-treated nano filters help purify world water supply

NANO TECH

Graphene nanoscrolls are formed by decoration of magnetic nanoparticles

NANO TECH

New tests for determining health and environmental effects of nanomaterials

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

'Groovy' hologram creates strange state of light at visible and invisible wavelengths

NANO TECH

First time: NJIT researchers examine dynamics of liquid metal particles at nanoscale

NANO TECH

SU Chemists Develop 'Fresh, New' Approach to Making Alloy Nanomaterials

NANO TECH

Heterogeneous nanoblocks give polymers an edge

NANO TECH

Size matters in nanocrystals' ability to adsorb release gases

ENERGY TECH

Like Water for Batteries

NANO TECH

Gold nanoparticles improve photodetector performance

Water clears path for nanoribbon development

Nanotechnology breakthrough is big deal for electronics

New NIST nanoscale indenter takes novel approach to measuring surface properties

Off-grid sterilization with Rice U.'s 'solar steam'

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