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October 8, 2008 4:44:02 AM CDT



Nanotechnology track this thread

Started by alexpm; Last updated Jun 5, 08 7:51 PM CDT by alexpm | View history

Nanotechnology

What is the matter on the atomic or molecular scale

Nanotech holds many promises as well as dangers for the future. What can we find out? But will nano-soldiers arrive before nano-helpers?

Stories

14 Stories

  • June 2008
    • Oil-Slurping Nanotechnology Next Front in Fighting Spills

      Oil-Slurping Nanotechnology Next Front in Fighting Spills

      (Newser) - Cleaning up oil might soon get faster and cheaper, thanks to nanotechnology. Scientists at MIT have crafted a paper-like substance that can absorb up to 20 times its weight, the Economist reports. The mesh of nanowires, each 1/1,000th the diameter of a human hair, feels and looks like paper—and can repel water, making absorption of oil more efficient. More »

  • May 2008
    • Nanotech Cancer Risk Seen

      Nanotech Cancer Risk Seen

      (Newser) - Researchers have found that microscopic “wonder particles” used in a small number of materials, including bicycle parts and bumpers, have asbestos-like effects if inhaled, the Los Angeles Times reports. Consumers aren’t really at risk from the carbon nanotubes, but factory workers making the products could be, the researchers concluded. More »

  • March 2008
    • Berkeley, Stanford Partner with Saudi University

      Berkeley, Stanford Partner with Saudi University

      (Newser) - Berkeley and Stanford University will help choose faculty and develop curricula for a new university in Saudi Arabia, reports the San Jose Mercury News . The graduate-level King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, funded by a $10 billion gift from the king, will focus on fields like petrochemicals and nano-technology when it opens in September 2009. University of California administrators said they agreed to the deal only with assurances that women would be treated equally. More »

    • HP Planning Revamp of Its Famed R&D Lab

      HP Planning Revamp of Its Famed R&D Lab

      (Newser) - Hewlett Packard is reorganizing its HP Labs in an effort to move more of the projects from the famed idea generator to market—and add to the company’s bottom line—more quickly,  Therese Poletti writes at MarketWatch. But even as HP looks for more commercial results from its legendary R&D facility, HP Labs continues to conduct theoretical research—its one-time core—as well. More »

  • February 2008
    • A.I. Will Match Human Brain in 20 Years

      A.I. Will Match Human Brain in 20 Years

      (Newser) - One engineer and futurist says it’s only a matter of time before machines are as smart as people, and people are part machine, the BBC reports. Ray Kurzweil claims that artificial intelligence will produce human-level smarts and even emotions by 2029. Humans, meanwhile, will inject nanobots into their brains to improve intelligence. More »

  • January 2008
    • Really Black Is the New Black

      Really Black Is the New Black

      (Newser) - What's the blackest thing you can think of? If you said a carpet of carbon nanotubes, you probably work with a Rice University team of scientists whose current project is "pushing the limit of how much light can be absorbed into one material." Their new material could lead to big advances in energy production and defense, Reuters reports. More »

    • Silicon Could Convert Waste Heat Into Power

      Silicon Could Convert Waste Heat Into Power

      (Newser) - Silicon could turn heat into electricity for cheaper than current technologies based on other materials, reports Technology Review . Researchers made nanowires out of silicon so that it would conduct electricity, but not heat. Normal silicon conducts both very well. The specially-made wires, however, convert heat applied at one end to electricity at the other end. More »

  • December 2007
    • Scientists Inscribe Tiny Bible

      Scientists Inscribe Tiny Bible

      (Newser) - Israeli scientists have crammed the entire Hebrew Bible onto a chip that is half the size of a grain of sugar, the AP reports. They used a particle beam to etch it onto the 0.01-square inch surface “like a hammer and chisel," one scientist said. The new Bible appears to be the world’s smallest; the previous record holder, reportedly from Australia, ran 1,514 pages and measured about an inch high. More »

  • November 2007
    • Radio Thinner Than Hair Invented

      Radio Thinner Than Hair Invented

      (Newser) - A UC Berkeley team has invented the world's smallest radio, composed of a single carbon nanotube 10,000 times thinner than a human hair. The San Francisco Chronicle reports that the device is the first fully functional radio to qualify as a piece of nanotechnology -- inventions no larger than a 100 billionths of a meter. More »

  • October 2007
    • Tiny Cancer, Pathogen Sensors Take Giant Leap

      Tiny Cancer, Pathogen Sensors Take Giant Leap

      (Newser) - Biosensors that monitor cancer in the body and pathogens in water are one step closer to realization, after experiments revealed a newly efficient microscopic power supply. The sensors themselves have already been engineered in tiny dimensions, but power has been the sticking point, Technology Review reports. New nanogenerators could power the sensors using blood flow, muscle contractions, even acoustic waves. More »

    • Silicon Ink Makes Splash in Solar Cell Industry

      Silicon Ink Makes Splash in Solar Cell Industry

      (Newser) - Silicon ink, a new innovation in nanotechnology, may revolutionize the way that solar panels are produced and dramatically cut solar energy costs. The company that makes the ink, Innovalight, will announce today $28 million in new funding from Norwegian corporation Convexa Capital, as well as plans for a 30,000-square-foot manufacturing facility, writes the San Jose Mercury News. More »

    • Hard Drive Guys Win Nobel Prize

      Hard Drive Guys Win Nobel Prize

      (Newser) - Proving physics isn’t just theoretical black-hole gazing, this year’s Nobel Prize went to a discovery that paved the way for radically shrinking the size of computers. Albert Fert and Peter Grunberg won for uncovering “giant magnetoresistance,” the phenomenon that big electrical resistance variances can be produced from weak magnetic ones. In practical terms? “Without it you would not be able to store more than one song on your iPod!” one scientist told the BBC. More »

  • August 2007
    • Scientists Roll Out Paper Batteries

      Scientists Roll Out Paper Batteries

      (Newser) - Scientists have come up with a paper-like substance that can act as a power source, Scientific American reports. The thin, flexible substance—composed of cellulose, carbon nanotubes, and liquid salts—can be used as both a battery and a supercapacitor, which can deliver quick bursts of high power. What's more, it can be cut, rolled up, or bent just like paper. More »

    • Physicists Float a New Theory of Levitation

      Physicists Float a New Theory of Levitation

      (Newser) - Two Scottish physics professors have published a report on forces of attraction that could be used to make objects levitate, writes the Telegraph . They've engineered a way to reverse the Casimir force, which normally causes elements to stick together. The discovery may lead to frictionless levitating parts in small mechanical systems. More »

14 Stories

Titanium dioxide nanofiber spiral   (© kun0me)
No Nano   (© andymiah)
Müller type field emission microscope used to view nano particles   (© mdxdt)
Nano Buisness: Looking at the camera   (© jurvetson)
The world's smallest radio has been crafter from a carbon nanotube, 10,000 times thinner than a human hair.   (Shutterstock.com)
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Nanotechnology Takes Off - KQED QUEST   (KQEDondemand (YouTube))

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Hardware    Artificial Intelligence    Cancer Research    Energy    Environment    Going Green    Medical Breakthroughs    Nobel Laureates    Saudi Arabia    Strange Stuff

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