24/7 News Coverage
March 14, 2019
NANO TECH
Defects help nanomaterial soak up more pollutant in less time



Houston TX (SPX) Mar 14, 2019
Cleaning pollutants from water with a defective filter sounds like a non-starter, but a recent study by chemical engineers at Rice University found that the right-sized defects helped a molecular sieve soak up more perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) in less time. In a study in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, Rice University researchers Michael Wong, Chelsea Clark and colleagues showed that a highly porous, Swiss cheese-like nanomaterial called a me ... read more

NANO TECH
The holy grail of nanowire production
Lausanne, Switzerland (SPX) Feb 25, 2019
Nanowires have the potential to revolutionize the technology around us. Measuring just 5-100 nanometers in diameter (a nanometer is a millionth of a millimeter), these tiny, needle-shaped crystallin ... more
NANO TECH
A new spin in nano-electronics
Dresden, Germany (SPX) Feb 26, 2019
In recent years, electronic data processing has been evolving in one direction only: The industry has downsized its components to the nanometer range. But this process is now reaching its physical l ... more
NANO TECH
Nanoparticle computing takes a giant step forward
Seoul, South Korea (SPX) Feb 26, 2019
Computation is a ubiquitous concept in physical sciences, biology, and engineering, where it provides many critical capabilities. Historically, there have been ongoing efforts to merge computation w ... more
NANO TECH
Breakthrough nanoscience discovery made on flight from New York to Jerusalem
Jerusalem (SPX) Feb 20, 2019
Professor Uri Banin, founder of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, and his colleagues Professor Richard Robinson and Professor Tobias Hanrath at Cornell ... more


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NANO TECH
Customized mix of materials for three-dimensional micro- and nanostructures
Karlsruher, Germany (SPX) Feb 14, 2019
Three-dimensional structures on the micrometer and nanometer scales have a great potential for many applications. An efficient and precise process to print such structures from different materials i ... more
NANO TECH
Nano drops a million times smaller than a teardrop explodes 19th century theory
Warwick UK (SPX) Feb 13, 2019
Droplets emanating from a molecular "nano-tap" would behave very differently from those from a household tap 1 million times larger - researchers at the University of Warwick have found. This is pot ... more
NANO TECH
Rice lab adds porous envelope to aluminum plasmonics
Houston TX (SPX) Feb 11, 2019
When Rice University chemist and engineer Hossein Robatjazi set out to marry a molecular sieve called MOF to a plasmonic aluminum nanoparticle two years ago, he never imagined the key would be the s ... more
NANO TECH
Research details sticky situations at the nanoscale
Providence RI (SPX) Feb 08, 2019
Brown University researchers have made a discovery about the way things stick together at tiny scales that could be helpful in engineering micro- and nanoscale devices. In a series of papers, ... more
NANO TECH
Nano-infused ceramic could report on its own health
Houston TX (SPX) Feb 06, 2019
A ceramic that becomes more electrically conductive under elastic strain and less conductive under plastic strain could lead to a new generation of sensors embedded into structures like buildings, b ... more
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NANO TECH
Aerosol-assisted biosynthesis strategy enables functional bulk nanocomposites
Beijing, China (SPX) Jan 29, 2019
In the movie Avengers: Infinity War, one of the coolest scenes occurs when Iron Man activates his nanotech armor and controls nanoparticles to form the armor upon his skin. Actually, developing such ... more
NANO TECH
Platinum forms nano-bubbles
Hamburg, Germany (SPX) Jan 28, 2019
Platinum, a noble metal, is oxidised more quickly than expected under conditions that are technologically relevant. This has emerged from a study jointly conducted by the DESY NanoLab and the Univer ... more
NANO TECH
New applications for encapsulated nanoparticles with promising properties
Basque Country, Spain (SPX) Jan 23, 2019
Nanotechnology and nanoscience are disciplines in which minute molecular structures with special physical and chemical properties are designed, manufactured and studied. One of the types of particle ... more
NANO TECH
Chemical synthesis of nanotubes
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Jan 11, 2019
For the first time, researchers used benzene - a common hydrocarbon - to create a novel kind of molecular nanotube, which could lead to new nanocarbon-based semiconductor applications. Researc ... more
NANO TECH
Carrying and releasing nanoscale cargo with 'nanowrappers'
Upton NY (SPX) Jan 04, 2019
This holiday season, scientists at the Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN) - a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility at Brookhaven National Laboratory - have wrapped a box ... more


Illuminating nanoparticle growth with X-rays

NANO TECH
Pitt chemical engineers develop new theory to build improved nanomaterials
Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Dec 17, 2018
Thanks in part to their distinct electronic, optical and chemical properties, nanomaterials are utilized in an array of diverse applications from chemical production to medicine and light-emitting d ... more
Nano Technology News from NanoDaily.com



NANO TECH
MIT team invents method to shrink objects to the nanoscale
Boston MA (SPX) Dec 14, 2018
MIT researchers have invented a way to fabricate nanoscale 3-D objects of nearly any shape. They can also pattern the objects with a variety of useful materials, including metals, quantum dots, and ... more
NANO TECH
Artificial synapses made from nanowires
Juelich, Germany (SPX) Dec 06, 2018
Scientists from Julich together with colleagues from Aachen and Turin have produced a memristive element made from nanowires that functions in much the same way as a biological nerve cell. The compo ... more
NANO TECH
How microscopic machines can fail in the blink of an eye
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 04, 2018
How long can tiny gears and other microscopic moving parts last before they wear out? What are the warning signs that these components are about to fail, which can happen in just a few tenths of a s ... more
NANO TECH
Nano-scale process may speed arrival of cheaper hi-tech products
Edinburgh UK (SPX) Nov 12, 2018
An inexpensive way to make products incorporating nanoparticles - such as high-performance energy devices or sophisticated diagnostic tests - has been developed by researchers. The process cou ... more
NANO TECH
Stealth-cap technology for light-emitting nanoparticles
Dresden, Germany (SPX) Nov 15, 2018
A team of scientists from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR), in collaboration with researchers from Monash University Australia, has succeeded in significantly increasing the stability ... more
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Floating ideas for an airlock near the Moon
Paris (ESA) Mar 14, 2019
Assembly of a new habitable structure near the Moon, known as the Gateway, is scheduled to begin in 2023. The international project will allow humans to explore farther than ever before and it brings new opportunities for European design in space. In late 2018, ESA commissioned two consortia - one led by Airbus and the other by Thales Alenia Space - to undertake parallel studies into the d ... more
+ Goddard prepares for a new era of human exploration
+ NASA selects teams to study untouched Lunar samples
+ NASA selects experiments for possible Lunar flights in 2019
+ Gateway to the Moon
+ How a vintage film format brought 'Apollo 11' back to life
+ Moon's dayside water molecules migrate over the course of a day
+ Lunar water molecules hop as surface temperature increases
Super-powerful Long March 9 said to begin missions around 2030
Xichang (XNA) Mar 12, 2019
Chinese scientists are designing what is expected to be the world's most powerful rocket, according to a senior researcher. Li Hong, deputy general manager at China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, said the Long March 9 super heavy-lift carrier rocket will be capable of lifting 140 metric tons of payload into a low-Earth orbit, or a 50-ton spacecraft to a lunar transfer orbit. The gi ... more
+ China preparing for space station missions
+ China's lunar rover studies stones on moon's far side
+ China improves Long March-6 rocket for growing commercial launches
+ Seed of moon's first sprout: Chinese scientists' endeavor
+ China to send over 50 spacecraft into space via over 30 launches in 2019
+ China to deepen lunar exploration: space expert
+ China launches Zhongxing-2D satellite


US ups pressure on Europe over 5G infrastructure from China's Huawei
Washington (AFP) March 13, 2019
The US upped pressure on Europe Wednesday to avoid turning to Huawei for 5G telecom infrastructure, with a top commander saying NATO forces would cease communicating with their German colleagues if Berlin teams up with the Chinese firm. The US and several other Western nations, fearful of the security risks posed by a company closely tied to the Chinese government, have shut Huawei out of te ... more
+ US warns Germany a Huawei deal could hurt intelligence sharing
+ Germany to consult US over Huawei security fears: Merkel
+ China backs Huawei not to be 'silent lamb' in US legal fight
+ Facebook blocks manipulation efforts in Britain, Romania
+ China chat log leak shows scope of surveillance
+ Huawei exec's next court date in Canada set for May 8
+ China's Huawei sues US over federal ban on its products
Floating ideas for an airlock near the Moon
Paris (ESA) Mar 14, 2019
Assembly of a new habitable structure near the Moon, known as the Gateway, is scheduled to begin in 2023. The international project will allow humans to explore farther than ever before and it brings new opportunities for European design in space. In late 2018, ESA commissioned two consortia - one led by Airbus and the other by Thales Alenia Space - to undertake parallel studies into the d ... more
+ Goddard prepares for a new era of human exploration
+ NASA selects teams to study untouched Lunar samples
+ NASA selects experiments for possible Lunar flights in 2019
+ Gateway to the Moon
+ How a vintage film format brought 'Apollo 11' back to life
+ Moon's dayside water molecules migrate over the course of a day
+ Lunar water molecules hop as surface temperature increases
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Defects help nanomaterial soak up more pollutant in less time
Houston TX (SPX) Mar 14, 2019
Cleaning pollutants from water with a defective filter sounds like a non-starter, but a recent study by chemical engineers at Rice University found that the right-sized defects helped a molecular sieve soak up more perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) in less time. In a study in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, Rice University researchers Mich ... more
+ The holy grail of nanowire production
+ A new spin in nano-electronics
+ Nanoparticle computing takes a giant step forward
+ Breakthrough nanoscience discovery made on flight from New York to Jerusalem
+ Customized mix of materials for three-dimensional micro- and nanostructures
+ Nano drops a million times smaller than a teardrop explodes 19th century theory
+ Rice lab adds porous envelope to aluminum plasmonics
Nitrogen dioxide pollution mapped
Paris (ESA) Mar 13, 2019
New maps that use information from the Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite reveal nitrogen dioxide emission being released into the atmosphere in cities and towns across the globe. Air pollution is a global environmental health problem that is responsible for millions of people dying prematurely every year. With air quality a serious concern, the Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite was launched ... more
+ Scientists go to extremes to reveal make-up of Earth's core
+ New key players in the methane cycle
+ High CO2 levels can destabilize marine layer clouds
+ On its 5th Anniversary, GPM Still Right as Rain
+ D-Orbit Signs Contract for launch and deployment services with Planet Labs
+ KBRwyle Awarded $19M to Perform Flight Ops for USGS Satellite
+ SNoOPI: A flying ace for soil moisture and snow measurements


Defects help nanomaterial soak up more pollutant in less time
Houston TX (SPX) Mar 14, 2019
Cleaning pollutants from water with a defective filter sounds like a non-starter, but a recent study by chemical engineers at Rice University found that the right-sized defects helped a molecular sieve soak up more perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) in less time. In a study in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, Rice University researchers Mich ... more
+ The holy grail of nanowire production
+ A new spin in nano-electronics
+ Nanoparticle computing takes a giant step forward
+ Breakthrough nanoscience discovery made on flight from New York to Jerusalem
+ Customized mix of materials for three-dimensional micro- and nanostructures
+ Nano drops a million times smaller than a teardrop explodes 19th century theory
+ Rice lab adds porous envelope to aluminum plasmonics
China is overtaking US in artificial intelligence: researchers
Washington (AFP) March 13, 2019
China is poised to overtake the United States in artificial intelligence with a surge in academic research on the key technology, an analysis published Wednesday showed. The analysis by the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence showed China has already surpassed the US in published papers on AI - although many of these were considered "medium-quality" or "low-quality." But the res ... more
+ Business with human and robotic exploration
+ Mathematics of sea slug movement points to future robots
+ Ultra-low power chips help make small robots more capable
+ Will artificial intelligence be the future of music?
+ New cell-sized micro robots might make incredible journeys
+ Robo-journalism gains traction in shifting media landscape
+ Faster robots demoralize co-workers
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

AirMap and Honeywell develop cost-effective tracking solution for UAVs
Madrid, Spain (SPX) Mar 13, 2019
World ATM Congress - Today, AirMap, the leading global airspace management platform for drones, and Honeywell announced the development of a cost-effective drone tracking solution to provide airspace safety authorities with situational awareness of manned and unmanned aircraft operations within an airspace system. Together, the companies will develop a cost-effective hardware device to all ... more
+ Air Force's Predator, Reaper drones pass 4 million flight hours
+ Northrop Grumman awarded $89M to support MQ-4C Triton system
+ Percepto UAV solution assessed in US operational experimentation program
+ MQ-9 Reaper drone detachment in Poland is fully operational
+ XQ-58A Valkyrie demonstrator drone makes maiden flight
+ Drones help scientists count koalas in Australia
+ Boeing unveils fighter jet-sized drone designed for Australia
New hurdle cleared in race toward quantum computing
West Lafayette IN (SPX) Mar 06, 2019
Qubits, the units used to encode information in quantum computing, are not all created equal. Some researchers believe that topological qubits, which are tougher and less susceptible to environmental noise than other kinds, may be the best medium for pushing quantum computing forward. Qubits, the units used to encode information in quantum computing, are not all created equal. Some researc ... more
+ Fast, flexible ionic transistors for bioelectronic devices
+ Faster method to read quantum memory
+ Nvidia buys Israeli chipmaker Mellanox for $6.9 bn
+ Two dimensional 'Lego' shows new methods for creating electronics
+ When semiconductors stick together, materials go quantum
+ Sydney united to build a quantum harbor city
+ Graphene quantum dots for single electron transistors


CesiumAstro raises $12M to develop faster comms for aerospace platforms
Austin, TX (SPX) Mar 14, 2019
CesiumAstro, Inc., pioneer of "out-of-the-box" high-performance multi-beam active phased array communication systems for space and airborne platforms, has announced the closing of a $12.4 million Series A funding round led by Airbus Ventures. Additional investors in the round include Kleiner Perkins, Franklin Templeton Venture Fund, Lavrock Ventures, Honeywell Ventures, and Analog Devices ... more
+ Physicists proposed fast method for printing nanolasers from rerovskites
+ At the limits of detectability
+ It's all in the twist: Physicists stack 2D materials at angles to trap particles
+ DARPA seeks tools to capture underground worlds in 3D
+ Researchers engineer a tougher fiber
+ Common foundations of biological and artificial vision
+ Light provides control for 3D printing with multiple materials
US envoy defends his criticism of Chinese religious persecution
Taipei (AFP) March 11, 2019
US envoy for religious freedom Sam Brownback defended his remark that China is "at war with faith" after the Chinese foreign ministry issued an angry statement condemning the envoy's words as a "malicious attack and slander on China's religious policies". Brownback criticised the Chinese government in a speech on Friday in Hong Kong, saying the Chinese government is engaged in the persecutio ... more
+ West using Christianity to subvert Chinese state: official
+ Civilians trapped as Myanmar rebels squabble over expected China boom
+ Tibet supporters in India mark 60 years since uprising
+ The house always wins? Few trade war jitters as Macau's casinos boom
+ Fired cancer patient exposes plight of Hong Kong's foreign maids
+ Vietnam jails 15 over anti-China protests
+ China rolls out rap songs to pump up parliament
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Can Entangled Qubits Be Used to Probe Black Holes
Berkeley CA (SPX) Mar 11, 2019
Physicists have used a seven-qubit quantum computer to simulate the scrambling of information inside a black hole, heralding a future in which entangled quantum bits might be used to probe the mysterious interiors of these bizarre objects. Scrambling is what happens when matter disappears inside a black hole. The information attached to that matter - the identities of all its constituents, ... more
+ Can artificial intelligence solve the mysteries of quantum physics?
+ Testing the symmetry of space-time by means of atomic clocks
+ Physicists reverse time using quantum computer
+ New report on industrial physics and its role in the US economy
+ 'Meta-mirror' reflects sound waves in any direction
+ CERN Approves Hunt for New Cosmic Particles at Large Hadron Collider
+ Astronomers discover 83 supermassive black holes in early universe
Resolving the jet or cocoon riddle of a gravitational wave event
Bonn, Germany (SPX) Feb 22, 2019
An international research team including astronomers from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, has combined radio telescopes from five continents to prove the existence of a narrow stream of material, a so-called jet, emerging from the only gravitational wave event involving two neutron stars observed so far. With its high sensitivity and excellent performance, the 100- ... more
+ US-UK-Australia funding to improve global gravitational wave network
+ Gravitational waves will settle cosmic conundrum
+ New squeezing record at GEO600 gravitational-wave detector
+ Mini-detectors for the gigantic
+ Portsmouth researchers make vital contribution to new gravitational wave discoveries
+ Four New Gravitational Wave Detections Announced
+ Universal laws in impact dynamics of dust agglomerates under microgravity conditions


Mixed-cation perovskite solar cells in space
Beijing, China (SPX) Mar 13, 2019
With the continuous improvement of efficiency and stability, perovskite solar cells are gradually approaching practical applications. PSCs may show the special application in space where oxygen and moisture (two major stressors for the stability) barely exist. Publishing in Sci. China-Phys. Mech. Astron., a group of researchers at Peking University in China, led by Dr. Rui Zhu and Prof. Qi ... more
+ Energise Africa launches UK crowd campaign to raise funds for solar in Africa
+ Light from an exotic crystal semiconductor could lead to better solar cells
+ Improving solar cell efficiency with a bucket of water
+ Photon Energy connects another 8 solar farms to Hungary's energy grid
+ JUMEME breaks ground on 1st phase of Lake Victoria mini-grid solar project
+ Layering titanium oxide's different mineral forms for better solar cells
+ Dynamic Energy brings solar power to Galloway factory
Lockheed Martin develops world-first LTE-Over-Satellite System
Valley Forge PA (SPX) Mar 14, 2019
Lockheed Martin has developed a new LTE-over-Satellite system designed to provide connectivity to remote regions, including areas without cellphone coverage, boats off-shore, or during natural disasters like hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes, catastrophic floods or volcanoes. New hotspots connect existing phones to satellites for reliable 4G connections. "When disaster strikes, cell phone ... more
+ New observations for the new economy
+ Space workshops to power urban innovation
+ ESA helps firms large and small prosper in global satcom market
+ China launches new communication satellite
+ ESA helps business fly in space
+ Next-generation space industry jobs ready for take-off
+ How ESA helps launch bright ideas and new careers
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