Monday, May 26, 2008

Pennsylvania Laying Groundwork For Nanotechnology As Economic Driver, DCED Official Says

Pennsylvania is
helping prepare the groundwork for a new nanotechnology economy, a top
Rendell administration economic development official told attendees
yesterday at the "NANO for Business 2008" conference in Breinigsville,
Lehigh County.

Department of Community and Economic Development Deputy Secretary
Rebecca Bagley said an AeA (formerly the American Electronics Association)
report ranked Pennsylvania as the nation's 7th largest "cyberstate." The
commonwealth showed significant growth in high-tech services and employed
210,000 high-tech workers with a total payroll of $15.1 billion in the
reporting period, 2005 - 2006, according to the report.


Friday, May 23, 2008

 

Safeguard on nanotechnology

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Congress must fund safety research for this atom-manipulating industry.

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Nanotechnology is producing exciting products, with one estimate that 15 percent of goods worldwide will involve such molecular engineering by 2014. But that won't come easily if its pioneers don't first address safety concerns.

The perception (true or not) of health and environmental problems, such as often surrounds genetically modified crops, could easily turn off consumers to the many benefits that nano-products offer. The risk of a backlash to this emerging field could delay or even wreck the introduction of revolutionary new products.

Nanotechnology is already out of the lab, with three to four new nano-products entering the marketplace each week, according to the nonprofit Project on Emerging Nanotechnology. More than 600 products boast of nanotech content, PEN says, from teddy bears to cosmetics to the Xbox 360 video-game console.

Substances reduced to nanoscale (1- to 100- billionths of a meter) show unusual properties. They can become much stronger or turn light into heat, for example. But because they expose more surface area to chemical interaction, there are concerns about unknown effects.

Some studies that have been done raise concerns. For example, nanosilver, tiny particles of silver that multiply that substance's known ability to kill bacteria, has already been put into socks and covers the surfaces of washing machines, acting as an antiseptic. One recent study showed that the nanosilver escapes into wash water and from there into the environment. Another study revealed nanosilver could kill helpful bacteria used to clean water at treatment plants.

Earlier this month a coalition of consumer, health, and environmental groups petitioned the Food and Drug Administration asking that it ban the sale of products containing nanosilver. More than 200 are already on the market.

Such concerns make a recent move by the US House's science committee all the more puzzling. A few weeks ago that panel approved billions of dollars to develop nanotechnology but failed to fund research into possible environmental, health, and safety (EHS) effects.

Early versions of the bill set aside 10 percent of the funds for EHS research. But opponents successfully removed it, despite support from environmentalists and prominent voices within the industry. It would serve the industry better if that provision were restored.

The bill does establish a watchdog within the White House science office, which would urge close attention to safety research. But that isn't enough.

All this is not to say that any current product necessarily is unsafe. The point is that not enough is known to be sure. Commercialization has outstripped safety studies.

PEN estimates that only about $13 million – less than 1 percent – of the $1.4 billion in federal nano-research funds spent in 2006 paid directly for environmental- or health-related studies. That's a little more than half of what's being spent in Europe.

The industry must also guard against false perceptions. Two years ago in Germany, more than 100 people who used a sealant called "Magic Nano" fell ill. The product was not created by nanotechnology but simply used the name.

Before fear outpaces science and society loses out on new products, Congress and the industry must speed up safety research.

source...
www.csmonitor.com


 
 

High cost of nanotechnology means manufacturers miss out

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The food industry is failing to take full advantage of nanotechnology because it is too expensive, according to a recent review.

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The food industry is failing to take full advantage of nanotechnology because it is too expensive, according to a recent review.

The review was conducted by Campden & Chorleywood Research Association and AZ-Tech Consulting Services. "Nanotechnology, defined as the use of material at the nano-scale, such is the case of nano-coatings, has been used by packaging scientists for many decades," said the report, A great small change. Nano-additives in food packaging. "But, the manipulation and understanding of engineered materials at the nano-scale is more recent and offers much for potential developments in food packaging."

Silver nano-particles, or silver cations bonded to a nano-composite, could provide anti-microbial properties, claimed the report. It noted that silver had been incorporated into socks and underwear that stay fresh longer, and that there was an opportunity for it to be used in food packaging. "Sharper Image and BlueMoonGoods.com in the USA, Quan Zhou Hu Zeng Nano Technology in China, and A-DO Global in South Korea, sell such products," noted the study. "These companies claim that the particles provide anti-fungal, anti-bacterial and anti-microbial properties that keep food safer, fresher, healthier, and tastier."

Nano-particles of zinc oxide also showed potential. "Studies at Leeds University have indicated that these could be used in packaging as an anti-microbial as the anti-bacterial activity on E. coli was found to increase with particle concentration," stated the report.

Meanwhile, evidence showed that silicon oxide nano-particles had been added to the inside of containers to increase their barrier properties, said the paper. "For example, SIG Cormoplast's Plasma Impulse Coating Vapour Deposition system applies a silicon oxide coating of less than 100 nanometres inside PET [polyethylene terephthalate] bottles. According to the company, it raises the shelf-life for 12oz carbonated soft-drink bottles almost three-fold to more than 25 weeks."

But despite the many opportunities for nano-particles in food packaging, the report stated that cost was the main barrier to use. "With the exception of some materials such as nano-clays, the costs of manufacturing and using such nano-particles is too great compared to the advantages achieved in the final commercial pack," claimed the study. "Consequently, most packaging incorporating nano-particles is currently receiving attention at the research stage rather than in commercial applications."

Consumer perception was also an issue, claimed the report. "Several studies in the UK have indicated that consumers have concerns over the applications of new technologies, including nanotechnology. This has been likened to the reluctance of European consumers to accept GM [genetic modification] technologies."

source...
www.foodmanufacture.co.uk


 

The role of surfactants in carbon nanotube toxicity

Synthesized carbon nanotubes, especially single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), are in the form of bundles with other impurities such as catalyst particles and amorphous carbon debris. In order to be useful for many types of applications, for instance in nanoelectronic devices or biomedical applications, SWCNTs need to be purified and dispersed into individual nanotubes. One method to do this is by surfactant stabilization of the hydrophobic nanotube surface, which overcomes the van der Waals forces among the nanotubes and results in suspensions of individual SWCNTs. Researchers have now investigated the cytotoxicity of SWCNTs suspended in various surfactants. Their experimental results show that the conjugates SDS/CNT and SDBS/CNT are toxic to astrocytoma cells due solely to the toxicity of the SDS and SDBS molecules, which administered alone are toxic to the cells even at a low concentration of 0.05 mg per ml within 30 min. However, the proliferation and viability of the astrocytoma cells were not affected by SWCNTs and the conjugates SC/CNT and DNA/CNT.

Monday, May 19, 2008

 

Selah Technologies lands $1.5M for nanotech materials

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GREENVILLE, SC—Selah Technologies, a company making advanced nanotechnology materials, has closed on a $1.5 million Series A private financing round. The company says the funding will help it commercialize it's core nanomaterial platforms.

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GREENVILLE, SC—Selah Technologies, a company making advanced nanotechnology materials, has closed on a $1.5 million Series A private financing round. The company says the funding will help it commercialize it's core nanomaterial platforms.

The company has also received support and a $200,000 investment from SC RA and SC Launch.

Selah, founded in 2006, makes Selah Dots and Selah Tubes. Selah Dots are carbon-based quantum dots that can be used for various applications, including life sciences, solar cells and anti-counterfeiting, among others. One potential application is in cancer treatment.

Selah Tubes, enriched carbon nanotubes, have a number of applications due to their impressive electrical conductivity properties. That includes potential for use in LCD screens, HDTVs, and other electronics.

"We are grateful for the confidence our investors have shown in our company. We appreciate the investment they have made and recognize the important responsibility we have to remain good stewards of that investment and their trust," says Michael Bolick, CEO of Selah Technologies.

The company's Web site says its growth strategy is to leverage relationships with market leading companies to establish joint research and development agreements that provide it with working capital such as personnel, equipment and materials or cash from licensing fees.

Selah moved into lab space in the Clemson University incubator facility in Pendleton, SC in Janurary. The company licensed its intellectual property on nanotech from Clemson.

On the Web: www.selahtechnologies.com



Nanotechnology revolution

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Nanotechnology is the engineering of functional systems at the nanoscale. Traditionally, the nanoscale has been defined as involving miniscule particles that measure between 1 and 100 nanometers where one nanometer is equivalent to 10-9 meters or smaller than 1/10,000 of the thickness of the average human hair!

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Dr Ali Mohammad

Nanotechnology is the engineering of functional systems at the nanoscale. Traditionally, the nanoscale has been defined as involving miniscule particles that measure between 1 and 100 nanometers where one nanometer is equivalent to 10-9 meters or smaller than 1/10,000 of the thickness of the average human hair! Nanotechnology is a multidisciplinary field, which involves physics, chemistry, biology, engineering, and medicine. Still newer, more efficient methods are being developed which will rely on the creation of sophisticated biomaterials. However, the challenge lies in interfacing these biomaterials with existing technologies, and creating the required infrastructure needed for mass manufacture.
Nanotechnology manufacturing has a promise of producing new materials a hundred times stronger than steel, and more efficient and cheaper to produce as compared to the existing production techniques. Mind boggling examples of some of these products include: very small devices that can be implanted under the skin, and pincers that can be injected in the veins to perform medical procedures; self - contained portable factories ready to make cheap products efficiently at the molecular scale; and development software that can process enormous amounts of data involving diverse sources of science.
Other benefits may include: 1. Molecular manufacturing would greatly reduce water requirements, and also cheaply run greenhouses would be a means of saving water, land, and food. 2. The efficient and inexpensive generation of electricity, using solar and thermal power, will make electric power available to basically everyone in the world. 3. Faster, cheaper, and more powerful computers will be available that could help improve information and communication systems even in the remotest areas. 4. Manufacturing of new technologies will be self - contained and clean, and will have less of an environmental impact. 5. Cheap and advanced equipment for medical research and health care will make improved medicine widely available. It will be feasible to restore human organ engineered tissue while simple products will greatly reduce infectious diseases prevailing in many parts of the world. 6. Nanotechnology will enhance capabilities in space ventures and operations.
However, while nanotechnology has a promise of great benefits to the future, there are some very serious risks. Imagine, for example, weapons that could be packed in a small match box, but carrying enough lethal material that is capable of wiping out the entire population of a major city. Other risks include: 1. The stakeholders — manufacturers, salesmen, and marketing agencies — will have to revise their investment plans to survive involving tens of trillions of dollars spent on everything from basic necessities to communication devices, recreation, and our environment. Huge monopolies, command over unprecedented wealth, and control of employment and product prices, enjoyed by the manufacturers could lead to anti-competitive practices and Schumpeterian creative destruction — the process by which a new product, or new production techniques, replace existing products and techniques resulting in the replacement of one monopolist by another. 2. Criminals and terrorists equipped with stronger, more powerful, and more compact devices can cause unimaginable harm to society.
Deadly chemical and biological weapons with remote - control devices will be easier to conceal. Moreover, black market and "home factory" operations in manufacturing and marketing of these products could flourish. The government agencies could use supercomputers for constant surveillance that could lead to abuse of individual freedom. 3. From the military point of view, nanotechnology weapons are more dangerous then nuclear weapons and, therefore, could further destabilize the world. For examples: Lighter and high - performing aerospace hardware will be much harder to spot on radar systems.Embedded computers and improved robots would allow remote activation of any weapon. Moreover, they can be developed much more rapidly due to faster, cheaper prototyping. Reduced ability of powerful nations to "police" the international arena.
In sum, the emerging technologies are capable of fundamentally transforming science, technology, and society. They can revolutionize human life and the consumption patterns. Moreover, they can have great implications for the economy, the society, social infrastructure, the environment, ethical and legal systems, and war and peace. On the other hand, some of these developments could be dangerous to stability and peace while others technologies could threaten the very existence of the human race. Also, tremendous opportunities for huge profits may lead to large - scale fraudulent practices. Most importantly, declarations or regulations may not have much effect on covert programs that are intended to develop products for military uses. Thus, it is imperative that all nations cooperate in finding effective solutions, which take into consideration the needs and sensitivities of the rich and the poor alike.
For Pakistan, it is crucial that its policy - makers, scientists, and industry must understand the implications of nanotechnological developments on the country's security and prosperity. The Pakistani nation must not miss an opportunity for developing useful nano products for the future generations. The leadership must develop a clear R & D policy towards nano technology in various fields from agriculture to electronics, from consumers' products to defense uses, from searching water and mineral resources deep down in the earth to exploring outer space, and from medical uses to advanced engineering feats. On their part, multidisciplinary teams, professional societies and organizations, industry, and educational institutions must work not only in the development process but also to inform and educate the general population about scientific developments and social and economic impact of nanotechnology. These institutions must also provide the students with ample experience in nanoscale fabrication, manipulation, and characterization techniques.

source...
http://pakobserver.net




Saudi Arabia to obtain insider info on nanotechnology water treatment from Japan

Saudia Arabia's Saline Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC) has started a joint research project with the Japanese Water Recycling Center focusing on integrating high-tech nanotechnology water treatment in the current process of distillation operations.

Monday, May 12, 2008

 

Nanotechnology for 'smart' soldier uniforms

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Nanotechnology is not one single thing. It's a number of different areas which examine both materials and physics on the nanometer-length scale.

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Paula Hammond: Nanotechnology is not one single thing. It's a number of different areas which examine both materials and physics on the nanometer-length scale.

That's Paula Hammond on engineering materials at scales one ten-thousandth the width of a human hair. Hammond's a professor in chemical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She said there's more to nanotechnology than just making springier golf clubs and tennis rackets.

Paula Hammond: We can also engineer materials that are extremely sensitive and can therefore detect something that might cause disease. We might be able to generate biomedical sensors that are extremely accurate.

Hammond and colleagues are developing "smart" uniforms for soldiers, clothes that respond to changes in light and heat, and can even seal themselves from a chemical or biological attack.

 

Cabot Aerogel and Birdair Announce Nanogel Fabric Membrane Roof Installation

Cabot Aerogel, a business of Cabot Corporation and Birdair, Inc., a global leader in tensile fabric roofing systems, announced the first installation of their new energy-efficient fabric tensile roofing product, Tensotherm with Nanogel aerogel.

 

Nanotechnology: Towards Reducing Animal Testing - conference details released

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Scientists from all over the world will meet in London on 28th and 29th May 2008 to discuss how nanotechnology can contribute towards reducing testing on animals.

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Scientists from all over the world will meet in London on 28th and 29th May 2008 to discuss how nanotechnology can contribute towards reducing testing on animals. The application of nanotechnology is currently revolutionizing medicine and this twoday conference, the first of its kind in Europe, will examine the role nanotechnology could also play in improving or refining the development of alternatives to animal testing whilst maintaining safety.

Animal testing is costly and there is a great deal of research on finding viable and effective alternatives (new methods that refine existing tests by minimizing animal distress, reducing animal usage, or replacing whole animal tests). Despite large reductions in animal testing since the early 1980s due to improved in vitro methods, levels remain high (over 3 million procedures in 2006) and results cannot always be extrapolated to humans.

Presentations from:

Dr Sandra Coecke, IHCP-ECVAM; Samantha Dozier, PETA; Béatrice Schaak, CEA Grenoble - DSV/ iRTSV; Dr Kelly BéruBé, Cardiff University; Dr J Malcolm Wilkinson, Kirkstall Ltd; Professor Ken Donaldson, University of Edinburgh; Dr John Haycock/ Professor Sheila McNeil, University of Sheffield; Dr. Fanqing Frank Chen, Lawrence Berkley National Laboratory; Dr Anna Price, European Commission JRC; Dr Katy Taylor, BUAV; Ulrich Krühne, Teknologisk Institut; Peter Ertl, Austrian Research Centers (ARC) GmbH; Dr Antonio Garcia, Arizona State University; Dr Nirmala Bhogal, FRAME; Dr Rosemary Gibson, Health & Safety Laboratory; Professor Shervanthi Homer-Vanniasinkam, Consultant Vascular Surgeon, Leeds General Infirmary Professor of Translational Vascular Medicine, Leeds Medical School; Arianna Ferrari, Darmstadt University of Technology; Dr Andy Bennett, FRAME.

Sessions will cover Toxicology and Drug Design; Tissue Engineering, Other Novel Models and Testing Strategies; Imaging and Diagnostics; Regulatory and Legal Issues.

For further information please contact Gemma McCulloch, gemma.mcculloch@nano.org.uk, on +44(0)1786 458020. Alternatively please visit http://www.nano.org.uk/events/ionevents.htm#animals.

The Institute, a registered charity, was one of the first organisations to raise awareness of nanotechnology and its applications, and is now a world leader in the field. It disseminates information through its website, http://www.nano.org.uk; organises events for industry on a variety of topics; supports new start-ups; and is involved in EU-funded projects. For more information on the Institute and its activities, contact Dr Mark Morrison, Institute of Nanotechnology, Tel: +44 (0) 141 303 8444; or email: mark.morrison@nano.org.uk

Wednesday, May 7, 2008


Graphene-based gadgets may be just years away

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Researchers at The University of Manchester have produced tiny liquid crystal devices with electrodes made from graphene - an exciting development that could lead to computer and TV displays based on this technology.

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Researchers at The University of Manchester have produced tiny liquid crystal devices with electrodes made from graphene - an exciting development that could lead to computer and TV displays based on this technology.

Writing in the American Chemical Society's journal Nano Letters, Dr Kostya Novoselov and colleagues from The School of Physics and Astronomy and The School of Computer Science, report on the use of graphene as a transparent conductive coating for electro-optical devices - and show that its high transparency and low resistivity make it ideal for electrodes in liquid crystal devices.

Graphene was discovered at The University of Manchester back in 2004, by Professor Andre Geim FRS and Royal Society Research Fellow Dr Kostya Novoselov. This incredible one-atom-thick gauze of carbon atoms, which resembles chicken wire, has quickly become one of the hottest topics in physics and materials science.

"Graphene is only one atom thick, optically transparent, chemically inert, and an excellent conductor," says Dr Novoselov, from the Manchester research team.

"These properties seem to make this material an excellent candidate for applications in various electro-optical devices that require conducting but transparent thin films. We believe graphene should improve the durability and simplify the technology of potential electronic devices that interact with light."

Prof Geim said: "Transparent conducting films are an essential part of many gadgets including common liquid crystal displays (LCDs) for computers, TVs and mobile phones.

"The underlying technology uses thin metal-oxide films based on indium. But indium is becoming an increasingly expensive commodity and, moreover, its supply is expected to be exhausted within just 10 years.

"Forget about oil - our civilisation will first run out of indium. Scientists have an urgent task on their hands to find new types of conductive transparent films."

The Manchester research team has now demonstrated highly transparent and highly conductive ultra-thin films that can be produced cheaply by 'dissolving' chunks of graphite - an abundant natural resource - into graphene and then spraying the suspension onto a glass surface.

The resulting graphene-based films can be used in LCDs and, to prove the concept, the research team have demonstrated the first liquid crystal devices with graphene electrodes.

Dr Novoselov believes that there are only a few small, incremental steps remain for this technology to reach a mass production stage. "Graphene-based LCD products could appear in shops as soon as in a few years", he adds.

A research team from the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Germany recently reported in Nano Letters how they had used graphene-based films to create transparent electrodes for solar cells (1).

But the German team used a different technology for obtaining graphene films, which involved several extra steps.

The Manchester team says the films they have developed are much simpler to produce, and they can be used not only in LCDs but also in solar cells.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by The University of Manchester

source...
www.nanitenews.com




Feds seek help applying nanotech to defense

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Federal agencies and large defense contractors are looking for small businesses with good ideas and the technical expertise to pull them off.

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The goal is to solve homeland security problems and other issues ranging from defense to public health and infrastructure safety, participants learned earlier this month at the Arizona Nanotechnology Cluster Symposium.

The third annual symposium attracted more than 350 businesspeople and academics for a day to the campus of Scottsdale Community College. All had an interest in nanotechnology, the scientific field focusing on materials and devices as small as atoms and molecules.

"We've got all kinds of challenges, and we also have all kinds of opportunities," Brad Buswell, deputy undersecretary for science and technology at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, told the group. "We don't know where the next good ideas are coming from, but we want to harvest them for the protection of the country."

The Department of Homeland Security has divided its science and technology portfolio into three levels, Buswell said.

About half of its spending goes for "transition" projects, or applied science that closes gaps between existing technologies. Higher-risk, higher-payoff projects fall into the "innovation" area, such as prototypes of devices that try to solve what the transition projects can't. DHS also allocates funds for basic research, such as that done at universities and national laboratories.

Some of the department's investments have come in nanotechnology, Buswell said. The technology is being applied to next-generation X-rays and to ways to neutralize chemicals and detect liquid explosives. Nanoparticles are even being tested in high-performance concrete to make infrastructure such as dams less vulnerable, he said.

The agency solicits new ideas twice a year through its Small Business Innovation Research program. In its most recent round, projects included one that seeks to prove that a person's pupils dilate when he or she intends to deceive others, and another to develop miniature sensors to detect chemical, biological or explosive materials nearby.

The first, Buswell said, might help tell whether the anxious person racing through the airport has nefarious intentions or is merely late for a plane.

The second might result in sensors small enough to fit into Americans' ubiquitous cellphones and give authorities an early warning of chemical or biological attacks.

Millions of dollars in research grants are available to small firms through SBIR and follow-on Small Business Technology Transfer programs at DHS and other federal agencies. The Phase 1 grants run up to $100,000, while Phase 2 grants top out at $750,000.

But there are some tricks to winning them, panelists said.

Raytheon Co., whose Tucson division makes missiles, is helping defense agencies define their needs under the program, said John Waszczak, director of advanced technology and SBIR/STTR. It therefore pays to partner with a big company that is looking for small firms' technology to fill gaps, he advised.

"They're very anxious to see it get into our products," Waszczak said. "And we're looking for technologies to provide discriminators and give us a competitive edge."

John Lombardi, whose Ventana Research Corp. in Tucson develops new materials and compounds, praises the SBIR program as an alternative to seeking venture capital.

"It gets you out of the garage and into a real research endeavor," he said.

But Grant Anderson of Paragon Space Development Corp. in Tucson cautioned that simply getting the funding should not be a small company's goal. Gaps between grant cycles are common, and the topics the government is interested in are rarely exact matches for what a company does, he said. He advised looking at SBIRs as a long-term process of taking something from prototype to commercialization, and getting to know the people within agencies so they ask for your company's technologies.

Ray Friesenhahn of Montana State University's TechLink Center also advocated planning for commercialization. His organization scouts small businesses for new technologies and works with Defense Department labs to evaluate and ultimately license them.

The center has started working with Arizona businesses that may be innovative but lack the experience or connections of working with the Defense Department.

"This involves a lot of partnerships for proving you can get to market," he said.

source...
www.azcentral.com


Reading, writing and nanotechnology

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Albany High students to gain inside track on burgeoning industry. Nanotechnology is a hot topic on college campuses. Now it has arrived at high schools. Up to 400 students at Albany High will get an introduction to the emerging science in a program designed to encourage minorities to acquire skills needed for the Capital Region's burgeoning nanotechnology economy.

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The school district was one of 20 nationwide selected to establish an Academy of Engineering by the National Academy Foundation, a New York City philanthropic organization that funds programs in public high schools.

The foundation will train teachers this summer and send advisers to help the district. They will work for 15 months with a team of 30 school employees and community members to establish its program, which is slated to start in September 2009. Ninth-graders that year will be recruited for the program's first 75 to 100 slots. Another class will be added every year for four years.

Students in the Academy -- a school within a school -- will take a core curriculum of math and science courses along with their regular courses. They will prepare for college and careers by interning at local nanotech businesses.

The initiative will make an underrepresented population of Albany students top candidates for higher paying local jobs, said Jackie Carrese, the district's instructional supervisor for science.

"Science is advancing so fast, we can't keep up with it," she said. "We can't find the workforce to keep up with these jobs."

She added: "Our kids can do it. We have to open the workforce to them."

The district has made an effort to connect its students to the nanotechnology industry, which is cooperating with the University at Albany's College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering. Two introductory nanoscience courses already offered at Albany High independent of the new program may be a national first for a public school, and an advanced course will start next year.

Concepts in nanoscience -- the study and development of technology on the atomic and molecular level -- are currently taught to Albany sixth-graders. The district recently received $200,000 in grants from the state Department of Education and the Society for Manufacturing Engineers to establish nanotechnology programs for seventh- and eighth-graders.

Superintendent Eva Joseph said the city district's focus on nanotechnology is modeled on other districts around the country that directly link students to local industries. She said it is the district's responsibility to open the doors to future local jobs for its graduates.

"We would be remiss if we weren't connecting ourselves to the opportunities here for our children," Joseph said.

Scott Waldman can be reached at 454-5080 or by e-mail at swaldman@timesunion.com.



Monday, May 5, 2008


Nanotechnology Produces New Electronic Materials

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STONEY BROOK, NY - The nanotechnology of engineering atomic layer interfaces to produce desired properties, called "improper ferroelectricity" reportedly holds promise for a technological revolution that may compare to the development of modern electronics.

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According to an article in the April 10th issue of Nature, a new artificial material is has been created that may mark the beginning of a revolution in the development of materials for electronic applications.

The new material, called a superlattice, which has a layered structure composed of alternating atomically thin layers of two different oxides (PbTiO3 and SrTiO3) takes on properties radically different than either of the two materials by themselves. According to the article, these properties are a direct consequence of the artificially layered atomic structure, and the interactions at the atomic level interface between the layers.

As stated in the article, Ferroelectrics are useful functional materials, with applications ranging from non-volatile computer memories, to micro-electromechanical machines or infrared detectors. "Improper ferroelectricity" is a kind of property that occurs only rarely in natural materials, with effects that are typically too small to be useful. This new superlattice material shows improper ferroelectricity (a property in neither of the original oxides) at a magnitude around 100 times greater than any naturally occurring improper ferroelectric, creating options for many more real world applications.

According to on of the material's researcher, Dr. Matthew Dawber, "Besides the immediate applications that could be generated by this nanomaterial, this discovery opens a completely new field of investigation and the possibility of new functional materials based on…interface engineering on the atomic scale."

Transition metal oxides are a class of materials that provoke great interest because of the great range of functional properties that they can present (dielectrics, ferroelectrics, piezoelectrics, magnets or superconductors) and the possibilities for integration into numerous devices. The majority of these oxides have a similar structure (referred to as 'perovskite') and recently, researchers have developed the ability to build these materials atomic layer by layer, to attempt to produce new materials with exceptional properties.

source...
Philip Buonpastore
http://pcdandf.com



 

Researchers create the first 'nanotrees'

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Since scientists learned to make nanowires, the tiny wires have taken many forms, and now U.S. researchers have accidentally learned how to grow nanotrees.

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University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor Song Jin and graduate student Matthew Bierman accidentally made some pine tree shapes one day and, in doing so, opened a new chapter in nanotechnology.

The scientists subsequently discovered their nanotrees are evidence of an entirely different way of growing nanowires. Until now, most nanowires have been made with metal catalysts, which promote the growth of nanomaterials along one dimension to form long rods. While the branches on Jin's trees also elongate, growth of the trunks is driven by a screw dislocation in their crystal structure.

Dislocations are fundamental to the growth and characteristics of all crystalline materials, Jin said. But this is the first time they've been shown to aid the growth of one-dimensional nanostructures.

We think these findings will motivate a lot of people to do this purposefully, to design dislocation and try to grow nanowires around it, Jin said.

The research that included Albert Lau, Alexander Kvit and Andrew Schmitt appears in the online journal Science Express.

Copyright 2008 by United Press International

source...
http://it.moldova.org




Self-perfection in nanomanufacturing

In the past, random defects caused by particle contamination were the dominant reason for yield loss in the semiconductor industry - defects occur in the patterning process (so-called process defects) when contaminants become lodged in or on the wafer surface. Trying to prevent such fabrication defects, chip manufacturers have spent much effort and money to improve the fabrication process, for instance by installing ultra-clean fabrication facilities. With the semiconductor industry's move to advanced nanometer nodes, and feature sizes approaches the limitation of the fabrication method used, particles are no longer the only problem for chip manufacturers. In a nanoscale feature-size fabrication environment, systematic variations, such as metal width and thickness variations or mask misalignment, are also major contributors to yield loss. Rather than perfecting a nanostructure by improving its original fabrication method, researchers at Princeton University have demonstrated a new method, known as self-perfection by liquefaction (SPEL), which removes nanostructure fabrication defects and improves nanostructures after fabrication.


Friday, May 2, 2008

Nanotechnology studied in heat transfer

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The U.S. Air Force has awarded a $7 million grant to a University of Michigan-led team to apply nanotechnology to problems involved in heat transfer.

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"The processes by which heat is transferred at interfaces between different materials are poorly understood," said Assistant Professor Kevin Pipe, who is leading the study for the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. "But in many systems, the ability to either efficiently transfer or block heat flow from one material to another is critically important to performance and reliability."

The research group includes nine scientists and engineers from the University of Michigan, Brown University and the University of California-Santa Cruz.

Pipe said his group will use ultrafast lasers in a special X-ray technique developed by University of Michigan Associate Professor David Reis that allows researchers to watch the vibrations of the atoms that carry heat energy across an interface.

Using nanotechnology, Pipe and his colleagues will re-engineer the surfaces of materials to regulate the flow of heat.

In addition to Pipe, the team includes Professors Rachel Goldman, Roberto Merlin, Humphrey Maris, Arto Nurmikko and John Kieffer; Assistant Professor Max Shtein; and Associate Professors David Reis and Ali Shakouri.

source...
www.upi.com

 

n-Surf Image Processor - Free evaluation

Short description

n-Surf is a new generation of software for analyzing and processing of images of surfaces obtained by Scanning Probe or Atomic Force Microscopes (SPM/AFMs).

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n-Surf Image Processor.
n-Surf is a new generation of software for analyzing and processing of images of surfaces obtained by Scanning Probe or Atomic Force Microscopes (SPM/AFMs). This application was developed for high-quality visualization and easy processing of all types of images. To date, support for Veeco/DI, NT-MDT and MPRI files has been implemented.

Owing to the virtual main frame and other unique features, multidocument interface allows to work easily and concurrently with a variety of images.
You will enjoy freedom in manipulating different views of your document in the n - Surf environment.

This application uses all modern facilities of Windows 2000/XP, such as Thumbnails, Clipboard, Float toolbars, Contexts Help and others.

Superior printing quality will fit every user's requirements.

The basic concept of n-Surf is presentation of all images in the form of three views, namely, 2D, Bump and 3D, each having strengths and weaknesses. However, you have freedom in choosing the most workable one to solve your specific problems.

Researchers can use a lot of facilities and processing methods offered:

* Variety of filters such as Arithmetic mean, Median, Laplacian, Gaussian, High-pass, Low-pass, Sharpening, Prewitt, Scharr, Sobel, Roberts and others.
* Dilate and Erode morphological operations.
* Fourier transform and Autocorrelation.
* Roughness analysis, Height histogram and Bearing curve.
* Profiles.
* Special operations such as Jump elimination, Flatting and Plane fitting.

This list is by no means complete and will undergo replenishment in the future. At present n-Surf is constantly under development. Therefore there is always a room to implement specific suggestions of its customers. I would be happy to receive your remarks and proposals as to modification of this software.

Feel free to download the n-Surf 1.0 beta evaluation version.
http://www.n-surf.com/download.html

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

Global Nanocomposites Market to Reach 989 Million Pounds by 2010, According to New Report by Global Industry Analysts, Inc.

Short description

Nanocomposites play a significant role in one of the most promising technologies known as nanotechnology. Worldwide demand for nanocomposites is increasing rapidly in packaging, automotive, electrical, and other applications due to their superior thermal, electrical conductive and other properties. Development of industry related nanocomposites with enhanced features and expanding research activities in development of new nanocomposites are some of the factors that would drive nanocomposites market in the coming years.

Article body

Nanocomposites display enhanced physical, thermal and other unique properties, which assist in achieving high-level performance across various applications. They have properties that are superior to conventional microscale composites and can be synthesized using simple and inexpensive techniques. Continuous demand from different end-use sectors, development of advanced and superior nanocomposites would stimulate their growth. Need for new and better nanocomposites by end users is one of the major reasons expected to drive the development of new array of nanocomposites. Identifying potential markets, intensifying research activities, and government funding for R&D operations constitute major factors in the commercialization of nanocomposites. A few nanocomposites have already reached the marketplace, while a few others are on the verge, and many continue to remain in the laboratories of various research institutions and companies.

Global nanocomposites market is projected to reach 989 million pounds by the end of the decade, as stated in a report published by Global Industry Analysts, Inc. United States and Europe dominate the global nanocomposites market, with a collective share of over 80% of the volume sales for 2008. The markets are also projected to witness rapid growth, driven by enhanced volume consumption of nanocomposites in various applications. Research institutions and companies are engaged in the exploration of efficient methods for developing nanocomposites in large volumes, and at lower cost.

Applications of nanocomposite plastics are diversified, with automotive and packaging accounting for a majority of the consumption. Increased R&D activities and advent of innovative materials is expected to widen the application areas for nanocomposites. Packaging segment represents the largest end-use market for nanocomposites in the world, with consumption estimated at 284 million pounds for 2008. Automotive segment is projected to generate the fastest demand for nancomposites during the period 2001-2010. Rise in demand and easy accessibility of nanocomposites would lead to their extensive usage in a wide range of applications.

Nanocomposite research is widespread and is conducted by companies and universities across the globe. Several global plastic suppliers have already commercialized products based on nanocomposite materials, with majority of the efforts focused on either nylons or polyolefins. Other industries are also optimistic about the future role of these novel materials, attributed to the growing volume of research studies being conducted across the world. The development of innovative nanocomposite polyolefins, and an array of other resin matrixes and nanofillers is also expected to bolster the market scenario. Technological advancements would reduce manufacturing costs, enabling the development of low-cost nanocomposites.

Major players profiled in the report include 3M ESPE, Arkema Group, BASF AG, Cabot Corporation, Cyclics Corporation, DSM Somos, Du Pont (E.I) De Nemours & Company, Elementis Specialties Inc, eSpin Technologies Inc., Evonik Degussa GmbH, Foster Corporation, Hybrid Plastics, Industrial Nanotech Inc, Inframat Corporation, InMat Inc, Nanocor Incorporated, Nanodynamics Inc, Nanoledge SA, Nanophase Technologies Corporation, Nanova LLC, Powdermet Inc, Showa Denko K.K., Rockwood Additives Ltd, TNO, Unitika Ltd, and Zyvex.

The report titled "Nanocomposites: A Global Strategic Business Report" published by Global Industry Analysts, Inc. discusses the prevailing trends, issues, demand forecasts, and activities that affect the industry. The nanocomposites market is analyzed over the period 2001-2015 for United States, Europe, and Rest of World.

For more details about this research report, please visit http://www.strategyr.com/Nanocomposites_Market_Report.asp

About Global Industry Analysts, Inc.
Global Industry Analysts, Inc., (GIA) is a reputed publisher of off-the-shelf market research. Founded in 1987, the company is globally recognized as one of the world's largest market research publishers. The company employs over 700 people worldwide and publishes more than 880 full-scale research reports each year. Additionally, the company also offers a range of over 60,000 smaller research products including company reports, market trend reports, and industry reports encompassing all major industries worldwide.

Contact information

Global Industry Analysts, Inc.
Telephone 408-528-9966
Fax 408-528-9977
Email press@StrategyR.com
Web Site www.StrategyR.com