24/7 News Coverage
June 19, 2015
NANO TECH
Unlocking nanofibers' potential
Boston MA (SPX) Jun 15, 2015
Nanofibers - polymer filaments only a couple of hundred nanometers in diameter - have a huge range of potential applications, from solar cells to water filtration to fuel cells. But so far, their high cost of manufacture has relegated them to just a few niche industries. In the latest issue of the journal Nanotechnology, MIT researchers describe a new technique for producing nanofibers that increases the rate of production fourfold while reducing energy consumption by more than 90 percent, holding ... read more
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CHIP TECH

KAIST team develops the first flexible phase-change random access memory
Phase change random access memory (PRAM) is one of the strongest candidates for next-generation nonvolatile memory for flexible and wearable electronics. In order to be used as a core memory for fle ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Researchers design the most precise quantum thermometer to date
Researchers from the UAB and the University of Nottingham, in an article published in Physical Review Letters, have fixed the limits of thermometry, i.e., they have established the smallest possible ... more
CHIP TECH

Exploiting the extraordinary properties of a new semiconductor
A team of researchers from Universite de Montreal, Polytechnique Montreal and the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) in France is the first to succeed in preventing two-dimensional ... more
Nano Technology News from NanoDaily.com


NANO TECH

Scientists observe photographic exposure live at the nanoscale
Photoinduced chemical reactions are responsible for many fundamental processes and technologies, from energy conversion in nature to micro fabrication by photo-lithography. One process that is known ... more


NANO TECH

Measuring the mass of molecules on the nano-scale
Working with a device that slightly resembles a microscopically tiny tuning fork, researchers at the University of Tsukuba in Japan have recently developed coupled microcantilevers that can make mas ... more
The World's Largest Commercial Drone Conference and Expo - Sept 9 - Las Vegas Next Generation Integrated ISR 2015 - Washington DC - July 27-29 26th Space Cryogenics Workshop Nuclear Cyber Security 2015
Nuclear Decommissioning And Used Fuel Market 2015
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NANO TECH

Novel X-ray lens sharpens view into the nano world
A team led by DESY scientists has designed, fabricated and successfully tested a novel X-ray lens that produces sharper and brighter images of the nano world. The lens employs an innovative concept ... more
NANO TECH

Engineering phase changes in nanoparticle arrays
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory have just taken a big step toward the goal of engineering dynamic nanomaterials whose structure and associated properties ... more
24/7 News Coverage
AI enables tailored education for medical students at scale
MIT senior turns waste from the fishing industry into biodegradable plastic
Iran president warns Tehran may face evacuation due to drought
NANO TECH

An efficient method of signal transmission from nanocomponents
Physicists have developed an innovative method that could enable the efficient use of nanocomponents in electronic circuits. To achieve this, they have developed a layout in which a nanocomponent is ... more
NANO TECH

DNA double helix does double duty assembling nanoparticle arrays
In a new twist on the use of DNA in nanoscale construction, scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory and collaborators put synthetic strands of the biologic ... more
INTERNET SPACE

This Slinky lookalike 'hyperlens' helps us see tiny objects
It looks like a Slinky suspended in motion. Yet this photonics advancement - called a metamaterial hyperlens - doesn't climb down stairs. Instead, it improves our ability to see tiny objects. Descri ... more
Army Network Modernization 2015 - Washington DC June 23-25
TECH SPACE

Turn that defect upside down
Most people see defects as flaws. A few Michigan Technological University researchers, however, see them as opportunities. Twin boundaries - which are small, symmetrical defects in materials - may p ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Quantum physics on tap
We all know intuitively that normal liquids flow more quickly as the channel containing them tightens. Think of a river flowing through narrow rapids. But what if a pipe were so amazingly tiny that ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Ancient Martian groundwater may have prolonged habitability beyond previous estimates
Solar flares pause Blue Origin-NASA Mars probe launch
Largest modern crater identified in Chinas Holocene geology
ENERGY NEWS

American energy use up slightly, carbon emissions almost unchanged
Americans' energy use continued to grow slowly in 2014, fueled by increases in the use of natural gas, wind and solar, according to the most recent energy flow charts released by Lawrence Livermore ... more
NANO TECH

Nano-policing pollution
Pollutants emitted by factories and car exhausts affect humans who breathe in these harmful gases and also aggravate climate change up in the atmosphere. Being able to detect such emissions is a cri ... more
NANO TECH

Random nanowire configurations boost conductivity
Researchers at Lehigh University have identified for the first time that a performance gain in the electrical conductivity of random metal nanowire networks can be achieved by slightly restricting n ... more
CHIP TECH

Detection of spin of atoms at room temps theoretically demonstrated
For the first time, a researcher at the University of Waterloo has theoretically demonstrated that it is possible to detect a single nuclear spin at room temperature, which could pave the way for ne ... more
NANO TECH

Rice scientists use light to probe acoustic tuning in gold nanodisks
In a study that could open doors for new applications of photonics from molecular sensing to wireless communications, Rice University scientists have discovered a new method to tune the light-induce ... more
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NANO TECH

'Microcombing' creates stronger, more conductive carbon nanotube films
Researchers from North Carolina State University and China's Suzhou Institute of Nano-Science and Nano-Biotics have developed an inexpensive technique called "microcombing" to align carbon nanotubes ... more
WATER WORLD

Gaza engineer seeks solution to water woes
With Gaza's supply of drinking water expected to dry up by 2020, a Palestinian engineer is pioneering a machine to make seawater potable for residents of the coastal territory. ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Europe Strives to Counter Russian and Chinese Satellite Menace
Arrival of US aircraft carrier fuels Venezuelan fears of attack
Amentum secures up to 995M dollar US Air Force contract for MQ9 modernization
TECH SPACE

A silver lining

NANO TECH

Chemists strike nano-gold with 4 new atomic structures

NANO TECH

New technique for exploring structural dynamics of nanoworld

NANO TECH

Nanotubes with 2 walls have singular qualities

ENERGY TECH

Advances in molecular electronics: Lights on - molecule on

NANO TECH

Happily ever after: Scientists arrange protein-nanoparticle marriage

TECH SPACE

Fast and accurate 3-D imaging technique to track optically trapped particles

CHIP TECH

Huge reduction of heat conduction observed in flat silicon channels

OIL AND GAS

Scientists develop mesh that captures oil - but lets water through

NANO TECH

Chemists create tiny gold nanoparticles that reflect nature's patterns

DARPA programs simultaneously test limits of technology, credulity

Light-powered gyroscope is world's smallest

Water makes wires even more nano

Optics, nanotechnology combined to create low-cost sensor for gases

Nanoscale worms provide new route to nano-necklace structures

Chemists make new silicon-based nanomaterials

Physicists report technology with potential for sub-micron optical switches

Roll up your screen and stow it away

UW scientists build a nanolaser using a single atomic sheet

Tiny bio-robot is a germ suited-up with graphene quantum dots

Sharper nanoscopy

NC State researchers create 'nanofiber gusher'

Click! That's how modern chemistry bonds nanoparticles to a substrate

Nano piano's lullaby could mean storage breakthrough

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