24/7 News Coverage
December 28, 2015
NANO TECH
Nanodevices at one-hundredth the cost
Boston MA (SPX) Dec 24, 2015
Microelectromechanical systems - or MEMS - were a $12 billion business in 2014. But that market is dominated by just a handful of devices, such as the accelerometers that reorient the screens of most smartphones. That's because manufacturing MEMS has traditionally required sophisticated semiconductor fabrication facilities, which cost tens of millions of dollars to build. Potentially useful MEMS have languished in development because they don't have markets large enough to justify the initial capi ... read more
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NANO TECH

Researchers demonstrate tracking of individual catalyst nanoparticles
Researchers from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont., have taken atomic-level images of individual nanoparticles during heating that could lead to improved fuel-cell technologies at lower cost, re ... more
NANO TECH

Scientists blueprint tiny cellular 'nanomachine'
Scientists have drawn up molecular blueprints of a tiny cellular 'nanomachine', whose evolution is an extraordinary feat of nature, by using one of the brightest X-ray sources on Earth. The sc ... more
NANO TECH

New industrial possibilities for nanoporous thin films
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a new type of materials with nanoscale pores. Bioscience engineers from KU Leuven, Belgium, have developed an alternative method that produces these materials in ... more
Nano Technology News from NanoDaily.com


NANO TECH

This article can be printed on a hair
A nanotechnology breakthrough from DTU revolutionizes laser printing technology, allowing you to print high-resolution data and colour images of unprecedented quality and microscopic dimensions. ... more


NANO TECH

Nanoscale one-way-street for light
If light is able to propagate from left to right, the opposite direction is usually allowed as well. A beam of light can normally be sent back to its point of origin, just by reflecting it on a mirr ... more

Your World At War


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NANO TECH

Microscope creates near-real-time videos of nanoscale processes
State-of-the-art atomic force microscopes (AFMs) are designed to capture images of structures as small as a fraction of a nanometer - a million times smaller than the width of a human hair. In recen ... more
NANO TECH

Heat radiates 10,000 times faster at the nanoscale
When heat travels between two objects that aren't touching, it flows differently at the smallest scales - distances on the order of the diameter of DNA, or 1/50,000 of a human hair. While rese ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Cane toad invasion threatens Pilbara biodiversity and culture
Amazonian forests altered by human actions show broad changes in diversity and evolutionary patterns
Climate's influence reshapes East African rift dynamics
NANO TECH

Shaking the nanomaterials out
Purifying water and greening nanotechnology could be as simple as shaking a vial of water and oil. At least that's the case for a new method to clean contaminated water full of unwanted nanomaterial ... more
NANO TECH

Nanotube letters spell progress
Never mind the ABCs. Rice University scientists interested in nanotubes are studying their XYOs. Carbon nanotubes grown in a furnace aren't always straight. Sometimes they curve and kink, and someti ... more
NANO TECH

New nanomanufacturing technique advances imaging, biosensing technology
More than a decade ago, theorists predicted the possibility of a nanolens--a chain of three nanoscale spheres that would focus incoming light into a spot much smaller than possible with conventional ... more
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NANO TECH

Using atoms to turn optical nanofiber guided light on and off
Researchers in the Light-Matter Interactions Unit led by Professor Sile Nic Chormaic at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) have developed an on-off switch wit ... more
NANO TECH

Nanostructured metal coatings let the light through for electronic devices
Light and electricity dance a complicated tango in devices like LEDs, solar cells and sensors. A new anti-reflection coating developed by engineers at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Tiangong hosts dual crews after debris impact delays Shenzhou-20 return
Dust and Sand Movements Reshape Martian Slopes
Early Matter-Dominated Universe May Have Spawned the First Black Holes and Exotic Stars
NANO TECH

Whisper gallery modes in Silicon nanocones intensify luminescence
Silicon is a conventional material for computer chips and solar cells. However, even though the properties of silicon are well known, nanostructures still offer up surprises. A team headed by Prof. ... more
NANO TECH

Measuring nanoscale features with fractions of light
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) researchers are seeing the light, but in an altogether different way. And how they are doing it just might be the semiconductor industry's ticke ... more
NANO TECH

Nano-walkers take speedy leap forward with first rolling DNA-based motor
Physical chemists have devised a rolling DNA-based motor that's 1,000 times faster than any other synthetic DNA motor, giving it potential for real-world applications, such as disease diagnostics. N ... more
NANO TECH

Nanomagnets: Creating order out of chaos
Miniaturization is the magic word when it comes to nanomagnetic devices intended for use in new types of electronic components. Scientists from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) have p ... more
NANO TECH

MIT mathematicians identify limits to heat flow at the nanoscale
How much heat can two bodies exchange without touching? For over a century, scientists have been able to answer this question for virtually any pair of objects in the macroscopic world, from the rat ... more

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NANO TECH

Electric fields remove nanoparticles from blood with ease
Engineers at the University of California, San Diego developed a new technology that uses an oscillating electric field to easily and quickly isolate drug-delivery nanoparticles from blood. The tech ... more
NANO TECH

Navy researchers recruit luminescent nanoparticles to image brain function
Research biologists, chemists and theoreticians at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), are on pace to develop the next generation of functional materials that could enable the mapping of the c ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Geopolitical instability and AI drive transformation in EO market
'Western tech dominance fading' at Lisbon's Web Summit
European Response to Escalating Space Security Crisis


NANO TECH

Light wave technique an advance for optical research

NANO TECH

Nanostructuring technology can simultaneously control heat and electricity

NANO TECH

Rice makes light-driven nanosubmarine

NANO TECH

Novel 'crumpling' of hybrid nanostructures increases SERS sensitivity

NANO TECH

New way of computing with interaction-dependent nanomagnets

NANO TECH

Researchers build nanoscale autonomous walking machine from DNA

NANO TECH

Finally a promising natural nanomaterial

NANO TECH

Anti-clumping strategy for nanoparticles

NANO TECH

Umbrella-shaped diamond nanostructures make efficient photon collectors

NANO TECH

Are cars nanotube factories on wheels

New design rule brings nature-inspired nanostructures one step closer

Molecular nanoribbons as electronic highways

Developing a nanoscale 'clutch'

Pirouetting in the spotlight

Nanocellulose materials by design

Smaller is better for nanotube analysis

Nanostructures for contactless control

Scientists build wrench 1.7 nanometers wide

Standards for triboelectric nanogenerators could facilitate comparisons


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