Utah News:

The third annual Wasatch Front Materials Expo - Presented by the Utah Chapter of SAMPE

Wednesday February 27th from 4:00 pm until 8:30pm

Rice Eccles Stadium Towers, University of Utah

No RSVP required! Admission is FREE!

Contact: Jay Schmidt Utah SAMPE WFME Chairman 801-536-6224

 

nanoDay – Utah Science Center at The Leonardo will host and conduct a NanoDay in the SLC Library foyer, from Noon to 6 pm, Thursday, April 22, 2008.

The Leonardo--and the Utah Science Center--its science 'arm'--are planning exhibits and activities related to elements, matter, scale as well as on nano- and nano-bio-technologies and related areas. Your NanoDay activities will help us assess and select suitable exhibits and activities for The Leonardo and for our The Leonardo on Wheels--Science program

Contact: jandrade@utahsciencecenter.org 

 

nanoUtah’08 conference will be held on Oct 16-17 at Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City.

Theme – “nanoMedicine – bridging the gap” .

 

Funding Opportunities:

COE 2008-09 Solicitation is now open for proposals:

As you know, the Utah Centers of Excellence program has been updated for 2008-09 to provide grant funds to companies, whether startups or existing firms, which license a technology developed at one of Utah's colleges and universities in order to take that technology to market. ----

COE home page HTTP://goed.utah.gov/COE/index.html

 

From NSF:

Nanotechnology Undergraduate Education (NUE) in Engineering – Deadline May14 2008

Emerging Models and Technologies for Computation (EMT) - Full Proposal Deadline Date: March 13, 2008

 

 

Global News:

Europe boosts industrial research in Nano-electronics

Network for Swedish nano research receives further boost

Taiwan to allot NT$23 billion for nanoscience, nanotechnology R&D

India's Fab City investment to top $7 billion as focus moves to solar

European Commission sponsors study on regulating nanotechnology in ...

China Plans to Surpass the US in Nanotech Development

 

US News:

FDA needs to systemically collect vital nanotechnology data ...

Administration Strategy For Nanotechnology-Related EHS Research

U of Oregon dedicates nanotechnology lab

NASA MidSTAR-1 puts nanotechnology in space

UAlbany to lead nano research consortium

 

Journal and Book:

New Updated Edition of 'The Physics and Chemistry of Nanosolids ...

 

Nano-Products:

MII tips nano-imprint for 32-nm apps

Windshield wipers replaced with nano coatings

MIT creates gecko-inspired bandage

 

Research News:

Nanotechnology may provide a way to deliver drugs to cartilage to ...

Nano Scaffold Developed To Rebuild Nerve Damage

Nano measurement breakthrough

Clean water from nanotechnology

Water disinfecting powder uses nano-coating

Proteins covalently attached to carbon nanotube tips provide new ...

Nanotechnology fiber optic boost

Bacterial Infections Diagnosed Using Nanotechnology

Scanning probe tip arrays for denser, faster, cheaper memories ...

Nano particles strengthen fluids

Nanotechnology-based self-cleaning fabrics

Nanotechnology in clothing harvests energy from the wearer’s movements

Nano capsule developed to fight cancer

 

Business:

Nokia Morph concept: flexible nanotechnology for the future

Nanosys and Sharp Expand Development Agreement for Nanotechnology ...

Nokia, University of Cambridge launch nanotechnology concept

UMD seeks benefits from nano fibers

Oncor Fights Copper Wire Theft With Nanotechnology

Analytical Nano buys Newton Instrument for 247000 stg

Sony drops new nano baiter

Ecology Coatings awarded fifth US patent for nanotechnology ...

Start-up says nanotechnology will keep food from spoiling

SBI Capital Markets to set up a USD 100 million venture capital fund

 

Articles & Reports:

Nanotechnology-based chicken feed?

Report measures impact of nanotechnologies in treating cancer and ...

Who will win the nano race?

Top-down nanotechnology reaches downward

 

Nano-Risks:

Risks of nanotechnology remain uncertain

Tests on sunscreen nanoparticles 'reassuring'

 

Conference:

1st Annual Conference on Nanotechnology Law, Regulation and Policy

 

Awards:

John Weaver from Birck Nanotechnology Center to get 2008 IEST ...

 

 

Education & Outreach:

 

SOURCE: Nano.Cancer.Gov - News for February 2008

New Nanotube Findings Give Boost to Potential Biomedical Applications
Carbon nanotubes have shown real promise as highly accurate vehicles for delivering antitumor agents into malignant cells, but a dearth of data about what happens to the tubes after they discharge their medical payloads has been a major stumbling block to progress.
[ read more ]

Nanotechnology Advances Brain Cancer Detection and Therapy
Brain cancer is one of the most aggressive and lethal of malignancies, made even more difficult to treat by the fact that most anticancer drugs have a hard time even getting to the tumors.
[ read more ]

Targeted Dendrimer Advances in Preclinical Studies
Although a variety of nanoparticles continue to show promise for improving cancer imaging and therapy, regulators and drug developers are concerned that these delivery systems may prove difficult to manufacture on a consistent basis, which is key for any agent designed for use in humans.
[ read more ]

Fluorescent Nanoparticles Image Tumor Marker in Animals
Since 2004 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved three new-generation anticancer therapies that target epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), a protein that is greatly overexpressed on certain types of tumors, including some forms of colorectal and lung cancer.
[ read more ]

Microfluidics, Nanoparticles Drive Novel Cancer Detection Schemes
Early detection of tumors is one of the Holy Grails of cancer research, an achievement that would greatly improve cancer therapy and prognosis.
[ read more ]

SOURCE: Nanotechnology.com

Nanotech Interview Dr. Placid Ferreira  University of Illinois

Placid Ferreira Interview                  

 

Dr. Placid Ferreira is a Professor of Engineering at the University of Illinois, and is the director of the Center for Nanoscale Chemical Electrical Mechanical Manufacturing Systems (Nano-CEMMS). Dr. Ferreira received his PhD in industrial engineering from Purdue University in 1987. He has received many awards, including the National Science Foundation's Presidential Young Investigator Award in 1990, the SME Outstanding Young Investigator Award in 1991 and the University of Illinois University scholar award in 1994.

 

Dr. Placid Ferreira is integrating heterogeneous nanoscale technologies to create a plethora of new and improved commercial products.

 

 

 

Tell us about yourself. What is your background, and on what projects are you currently working?

 

I am a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Illinois. I am also the director of the Center for Nanoscale Chemical Electrical -Mechanical Manufacturing Systems (Nano-CEMMS), an NSF-sponsored Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center at the University of Illinois, that also involves researchers from California Institute of Technology, North Carolina A&T University and Stanford University.  My research addresses issues in process design for nanoscale manufacturing, tooling and instrumentation for nanomanufacturing (nanopositioning platforms, MEMS systems for sensing) and systems integration.

 

Tell us about Nano-CEMMS.

 

The center is currently focused on manufacturing at the nanoscale. It is primarily funded by the National Science Foundation (though industrial sponsorship of its research is on the rise) and is exploring how nanoscale fluidic and ionic transport can be exploited as the basis of patterning and assembly processes with nanoscale resolution. Such transport phenomena offer the possibility of exquisite control and selectivity and high-efficiency.  Together these phenomena can enable a paradigm for manufacturing at the nanoscale that is versatile enough to deal with several materials, has potential for scaled-up manufacturing and can also complement conventional high-vacuum, top-down fabrication technology. The materials versatility, and complementary nature of the processes we are developing, should enable heterogeneous integration with nanoscale resolution and allow us to create a new product and capability space with various materials, dimensional scales, function, form-factors.

 

 

What specific applications could emerge from this nanoscale integration?

 

There are many, but we are looking at the types of applications that involve the integration of many functions. For example, lab-on-a-chip type applications require fluid handling, mechanical actuation, sensing (optics and or electronics) and readout, signal processing and computation. The material sets needed and the micro/nano fabrication techniques used for them are quite incompatible with each other. We see an opportunity here for the use of the processes emerging from the Center to enable this kind of heterogeneous integration. So our Center has a testbed application underway on combinatorial chemistry on a chip.  This lab-on-a-chip example is really indicative of a discernable shift in product realization strategies being employed across a wide spectrum of products. Rather than encapsulating different functions in ‘sub-assemblies’, such functions are embedded by directly integrating active materials and structures into locations where they are needed in ever shrinking volumes. This shift is very apparent when one contrasts a CRT display from a few years ago with flat panel displays and emerging products like e-paper that integrate mechanical, optical and electronic function into every volume element of the product. Thus, we see a large opportunity for such processes that enable such heterogeneous integration of electronic, photonic, electro-mechanical and chemical function into products of unusual physical form factors; flexible, stretchable, large-area, etc.  One might envision flexible displays, conformal, high-efficiency solar collectors, roll-up computers, sensorially active clothing and so on. Such product ideas are aplenty; a means for realizing them by conventional fabrication techniques has proven more difficult. Research in our Center hopes to enable the economically feasible production of such products.

 

 

What are the advantages of using fluidics as the basis of nanomanufacturing processes?

 

Fluidic transport is very efficient and, to a large extent, easy to manage and confine. Further, as one scales down, the increasing surface-to-volume gives us greater access to the ‘inside’ (if one might call it that) of a flow stream. Thus by functionalizing the wall of the confinement, one can be very selective about what passes through; one can catalyze chemical reactions with greater efficiency. So exploiting all these characteristics allows us to measure, mix and react, separate and deliver or remove materials with high spatial precision and in precise quantities – the basis of a manufacturing process.

 

What is superionic stamping, and why is it important?

 

Superionic stamping is an electrochemical process for making metallic interconnects.  It is essentially a nanofabrication technique, and it can potentially be used to create all manner of chemical sensors, photonic structures, and electrical interconnects. Unlike other approaches it creates the nanopatterns in a single step, so this technology could be both low-cost and high-yield.

 

What is a toolbit and how does it figure in the research of the Center?

 

A toolbit in manufacturing terminology is essentially the business end of the machine tool – the part that interacts with the workpiece being shaped or built by the machine. To increase the versatility of the machine this piece that does the real work is made interchangeable – like the cartridge in your printer.

We look at toolbits as implementing manufacturing processes by exploiting different transport phenomena and addressing the manufacture of micro and nanostructures of different materials and with different geometries.

 

 

What are the different types of toolbit, and how are they different?

 

There are several different toolbits, each with unique capabilities. These include:

 

a. The molecular gate toolbit: This is a toolbit that uses efficient electrokinetic transport in long (high-aspect ratio) nanopores.  These pores can be made with different diameters and surface properties to ‘select’ molecules from a stream and drive them to the printing surface for printing on to a substrate.  We are working on creating a toolbit that embodies a large array of such nanopores that are electronically addressable so that they can be switched on and off to enable high-throughput printing of various biomaterials.

b. The e-jet writing toolbit: This uses electrohydrodynamic transport to draw liquids from a sub-micron orifice on to a substrate. It is in some respects like an ink-jet printer, and it gives us very high resolution and good control of trajectory of the droplets drawn from the orifice. We recently published a paper in Nature Materials in which we describe this process - we have created functional submicron electronics using this process. This work is very exciting - we can now print a wide variety of materials from DNA and protein suspensions, to conducting and semiconducting polymers, to suspensions of nanoparticles and carbon nanotubes with sub-micron resolutions using this technique. This opens up a means of printing functional bio-sensors with embedded electronics and optics, etc – the heterogeneous integration I was talking about earlier.

c.  The superionic stamping toolbit: Here we create metallic nanostructures. The approach that the Center has developed allows for nanopatterning of large-area metallic films with a stamping like process that is very compatible with imprint lithography equipment.

d. Meniscus-controlled deposition: Here liquid electrolytes in sub-micron nozzles are used to build nanowires with metals like copper and platinum.

e. Direct ink writing toolbit: This is a pressure driven direct writing system but the technology is in the formulation of the inks. It gives us the ability to create 3-D microstructures with sub-micron features in various materials.

 

With this coverage, the Center is helping develop processes that allow us to build nanostructures using materials ranging from ceramics, metals, semiconductors, polymers and biomaterials. Work within the Center, under the direction of Professor John Rogers, looks at how to integrate these structures using an adhesiveless solid transfer printing process. Together, these processes allow us to address the problem of heterogeneous integration I spoke about earlier.

 

Have you or any of your colleagues formed any startup corporations?

 

A colleague of mine named John Rogers is involved in a startup based on our research. This startup is called Semprius(www.semprius.com), and Semprius has developed a method of printing semiconductors onto almost any surface. Two students, previously with the Center have started up a company developing mesoscale machine tools for micromachining (Microlution, Inc.). The application is not being pursued directly by the Center, but the development of the positioning technology that goes into such systems was supported by the Center. There has been a great deal of interest generated from our research, both from the scientific press and from potential investors. Some of these concepts will be pursued by startups, but many will simply be licensed to existing companies.

 

Could any of these technologies get commercialized within the next five years?

 

I think so. It is clear at this point that the technologies work, and it is primarily a matter of getting them into production.   Nano-CEMMS is not alone in working on this, the field is highly competitive. But many of the technologies being developed will never be directly seen by the consumer - they will serve to improve manufacturing processes.


 

What are the chief technical problems to scaling up this technology?

 

There are three main issues to scale up - process technology, tools, and recipes. All three of these issues need more work, but there are no “show stoppers” to commercializing this technology. Since it is clear that the technology is viable there are already considerable engineering resources being devoted to its development.  So the pace of technological development should actually accelerate. 

 

If you had $1 million to invest in nanotech, what investments would you make?

 

I believe that the area of tools for nanotechnology (fabrication and imaging) could be particularly lucrative. Virtually all nanotechnology research involves sophisticated, expensive tools, and these instruments will be needed regardless of which particular technologies are successfully developed. So a corporation that develops superior machines to view and manipulate nanoparticles and nanostructures could become highly profitable.

 

Outside of your own work, what aspect of small and advanced technologies excites you the most?

 

The concept of biomimicry is particularly fascinating. Nanotechnology should allow us the opportunity to mimic many of the processes that nature uses. Natural processes are generally low-temperature, environmentally benign, efficient, and often quite clever. So biomimicry could allow us to continue developing in an environmentally sustainable manner and reducing our environmental footprint.

 

How do you see your research evolving over the next decade?

 

I would naturally like to see this technology expand. I am confident that some of the technologies that we are developing will be in widespread use within a decade. Our research could be applied to enable so many things, such as smaller and cheaper transistors and microchips, more flexible lighting, superior displays, better diagnostic tools, cheaper sensors, and more efficient energy collection.  If our research is developed as I hope, then we could see not only improvements in existing industries but also the creation of entirely new ones.

 

 

 

 

 

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