24/7 News Coverage
October 09, 2015
NANO TECH
Nanocellulose materials by design
Chicago IL (SPX) Oct 06, 2015
Theoretically, nanocellulose could be the next hot supermaterial. A class of biological materials found within numerous natural systems, most notably trees, cellulose nanocrystals have captured researchers' attention for their extreme strength, toughness, light weight, and elasticity. The materials are so strong and tough, in fact, that many people think they could replace Kevlar in ballistic vests and combat helmets for military. Unlike their source material (wood), cellulose nanocrystals are tra ... read more
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NANO TECH

Nanostructures for contactless control
Chemists at Ludwig-Maximilians-Univeristaet (LMU) in Munich have fabricated a novel nanosheet-based photonic crystal that changes color in response to moisture. The new material could form the basis ... more
NANO TECH

Scientists build wrench 1.7 nanometers wide
Hold up your two hands. They are identical in structure, but mirror opposites. No matter how hard you try, they can't be superimposed onto each other. Or, as chemists would say, they have "chirality ... more
NANO TECH

Standards for triboelectric nanogenerators could facilitate comparisons
More than 60 research groups worldwide are now developing variations of the triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG), which converts ambient mechanical energy into electricity for powering wearable electr ... more
Nano Technology News from NanoDaily.com


TECH SPACE

Physicists defy conventional wisdom to identify ferroelectric material
A team of physicists has defied conventional wisdom by inducing stable ferroelectricity in a sheet of strontium titanate only a few nanometers thick. The discovery could open new pathways to find ne ... more


NANO TECH

Nano-trapped molecules are potential path to quantum devices
Single atoms or molecules imprisoned by laser light in a doughnut-shaped metal cage could unlock the key to advanced storage devices, computers and high-resolution instruments. In a paper publ ... more
Training Space Professionals Since 1970

Nuclear Decommissioning And Used Fuel Market 2015
Make SMRs a commercial reality Turn key solar systems for domestic and commercial installations
Solar systems for home and business installations
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NANO TECH

Nanoelectronics could get a boost from carbon research
The smallest of electronics could one day have the ability to turn on and off on an atomic scale. Lawrence Livermore scientists have investigated a way to create linear chains of carbon atoms ... more
NANO TECH

Nano-dunes with the ion beam
Many semiconductor devices in modern technology - from integrated circuits to solar cells and LEDs - are based on nanostructures. Producing arrays of regular nanostructures usually requires substant ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Understanding the nuances of human-like intelligence
Advanced air filter could enable building vents to capture carbon and reduce energy use
Ancient wallaby ancestor reveals evolutionary leap for kangaroos
NANO TECH

Science provides new way to peer into pores
Rice University scientists led a project to "see" and measure the space in porous materials, even if that space is too small or fragile for traditional microscopes. The Rice lab of chemist Chr ... more
NANO TECH

Realizing carbon nanotube integrated circuits
Individual transistors made from carbon nanotubes are faster and more energy efficient than those made from other materials. Going from a single transistor to an integrated circuit full of transisto ... more
NANO TECH

Using DNA origami to build nanodevices of the future
Scientists have been studying ways to use synthetic DNA as a building block for smaller and faster devices. DNA has the advantage of being inherently "coded". Each DNA strand is formed of one ... more
Nuclear Operations and Maintenance Efficiency Summit USA 2015
NANO TECH

Nanoparticles - small but unique
Scientists at Chalmers University of Technology have developed a new way to study nanoparticles one at a time, and have discovered that individual particles that may seem identical in fact can have ... more
NANO TECH

Nanoporous gold sponge makes DNA detector
Sponge-like nanoporous gold could be key to new devices to detect disease-causing agents in humans and plants, according to UC Davis researchers. In two recent papers in Analytical Chemistry, ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
New Structures Could Keep Astronauts Fit During Long Missions
Aerospace modules completed for Artemis lunar crew mission
MIT researchers propose a new model for legible, modular software
NANO TECH

Researchers use laser to levitate, glowing nanodiamonds in vacuum
Researchers have, for the first time, levitated individual nanodiamonds in vacuum. The research team is led by Nick Vamivakas at the University of Rochester who thinks their work will make extremely ... more
NANO TECH

Making nanowires from protein and DNA
The ability to custom design biological materials such as protein and DNA opens up technological possibilities that were unimaginable just a few decades ago. For example, synthetic structures made o ... more
NANO TECH

Pirouetting in the spotlight
Scientists from Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich have developed a new class of molecular motors that rotate unidirectionally at speeds of up to 1 kHz when exposed to sunlight at room ... more
NANO TECH

Smaller is better for nanotube analysis
In a great example of "less is more," Rice University scientists have developed a powerful method to analyze carbon nanotubes in solution. The researchers' variance spectroscopy technique zoom ... more
SOLAR DAILY

New 'greener' way to assemble materials for solar applications
The efficiency of solar cells depends on precise engineering of polymers that assemble into films 1,000 times thinner than a human hair. Today, formation of that polymer assembly requires solvents t ... more
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TIME AND SPACE

Draw out of the predicted interatomic force
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research, the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan. Liquid Bi shows a peculiar dispersion of the acoustic mode, which is related to the P ... more
NANO TECH

Setting ground rules for nanotechnology research
In two new studies, researchers from across the country spearheaded by Duke University faculty have begun to design the framework on which to build the emerging field of nanoinformatics. Nanoi ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Arrival of US aircraft carrier fuels Venezuelan fears of attack
Russia offers US nuclear talks in bid to ease tensions
US-China tensions weigh on Lisbon's Web Summit
SOLAR DAILY

Another milestone in hybrid artificial photosynthesis

NANO TECH

Record high pressure squeezes secrets out of osmium

NANO TECH

Intractable pain may find relief in tiny gold rods

TECH SPACE

'Magic' sphere for information transfer

NANO TECH

Louisiana Tech University researchers discover synthesis of a new nanomaterial

NANO TECH

'Diamonds from the sky' approach turns CO2 into valuable products

NANO TECH

High-precision control of nanoparticles for digital applications

NANO TECH

Formation of swarms in nanosystems

ENERGY TECH

Drexel engineers 'sandwich' atomic layers to make new materials for energy storage

WATER WORLD

Eliminating water-borne bacteria with pages from The Drinkable Book

Camera for the nano-cosmos

ISS to Open Research Facility for Materials Science Research by 2017

Nanoscale switches promise faster, more versatile chip-scale devices

Growing graphene nanoribbons could enable fast efficient electronics

'Yolks' and 'shells' improve rechargeable batteries

Sandcastles inspire new nanoparticle binding technique

Transparent, conductive network of encapsulated silver nanowires

Short wavelength plasmons observed in nanotubes

ASU researchers demonstrate the world's first white lasers

Breakthrough in knowledge of how nanoparticles grow

Nanotechnology research leads to super-elastic conducting fibers

On the way to breaking the terahertz barrier for graphene nanoelectronics

A most singular nano-imaging technique

Plantations of nanorods on carpets of graphene capture the Sun's energy

Chemotherapeutic coatings enhance tumor-frying nanoparticles

Polymer mold makes perfect silicon nanostructures

Nanoscale light-emitting device has big profile

Nanowires highly 'anelastic'

Superslippery islands (but then they get stuck)

Ultra-thin, all-inorganic molecular nanowires successfully compounded

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