
For Registration and conference agenda – please visit http://www.nanofab.utah.edu/nanoutah09/
Global News:
Japanese boost for UK nanotechnology research
RUSNANO/Renova Nano Solar Joint Venture Orders Production ...
US News:
US develops targeted cancer treatment by nanomaterials
New Data Show Nanotechnology-Related Activities in Every US State
Journal and Book:
Funding
Opportunities:
Nano-Products:
Research News:
Boiling up Zinc Oxide Nanorods without Toxic Solvents
Scientists Employ Nano-Pores Arrangement to Synthesize Porous Alumina
Two Physics Breakthroughs That Will One Day Lead to Superarmor
Nanotubes Promise Ultra-Small Wearable Oxygen Sensors
Electronics:
Asus Eee PC 1002HA cloned, Atomic guts replaced with VIA Nano
IBM Seeking to Develop Microchips Using “DNA Origami”
Tech – New organic nano-wires may help replace silicon in computer ...
DNA nanotechnology in computers knocks down another roadblock
Nanotechnology Researchers Develop Nanoscale Electric Contacts Out ...
Energy, Water &
Environment:
Nanotechnology - Advancing Environmental Protection by Addressing ...
New carbon nanotube sensor can reversibly detect nitric oxide
Using Nanotechnology to Synthesize New Cathode Material for ...
Materials &
Manufacturing:
Scientists Develop Self-Cleaning Material
NanoMedicine & Health:
China Reports the First Human Nano-Fatalities
Researchers use nanobees to attack, prevent cancer
Nanotechnology used for developing new DNA cancer test
DNA 'organises itself' on silicon
Business:
Market Report -- In Play (NANO)
Nanometrics Inc., NANO - Nanometrics Post Second Quarter Financial ...
Nano contract to contribute Rs 30-35 Cr to topline: Kinetic ...
Oerlikon Solar To Provide 120MW Thin Film Line to Russian JV
Articles &
Reports:
Nanotechnology - What are the Environmental Benefits of Nanotechnology
From global warming to energy storage and nanotechnology ...
Will nano chips replace silicon?
Putting Nanotechnology on the Map: New Data Show Nanotechnology ...
Nano-Risks & Safety:
Download free Nanotechnology Health and Environmental Risks book ...
Report: Even Those 'Safe' Sunscreens May Not Be So Safe
Nano-Sunscreens: Issue continues to be controversially discussed
Deaths, lung damage linked to nanoparticles in China
A safe approach to nanotechnology
Jobs:
Education &
Outreach:
SOURCE: NanoNews-Now Digest
'Nanospears' could lead to better solar cells, lasers,
lighting
Missouri University of Science and Technology August
15th, 2009 Growing - and precisely aligning - microscopic,
spear-shaped zinc oxide crystals on a surface of single-crystal silicon,
researchers at Missouri University of Science and Technology may have developed
a method to make more efficient solar cells.
Camera
flash turns graphite oxide into graphene
Northwestern University August 15th, 2009 An
insulator can now be transformed to conduct electricity by an ordinary camera
flash.
Molecules
wrestle for supremacy in creation of superstructures
University of Liverpool August 15th, 2009 Research
at the University of Liverpool has found how mirror-image molecules gain
control over each other and dictate the physical state of superstructures.
Iran
Makes Tissue-Rebuilding Nanobioceramics
farsnews.com August 15th, 2009 Iranian
researchers at Isfahan University of Technology succeeded in making a kind of bioconsistent nonobioceramic
which could prove useful in rebuilding and recreating the body tissues due to
its bioactivity behavior.
Small
marvels
theage.com.au August 16th, 2009 Scientists from Australia and
the US have just measured how energy is lost in ultra-small particles, a key
step towards developing a device to weigh the smallest atom, hydrogen.
Understanding how energy flows is fundamental to many applications in
nanotechnology and one of these is this ultimate goal of super-sensitive mass
sensing.
Education
Briefs: Museum offers free field trips
newsok.com August 16th, 2009 Oklahoma State
University-Tulsa researcher Daryoosh Vashaee is developing nanotechnology that can convert waste
heat to energy. His process to produce a clean, alternative energy source could
reduce the use of fossil fuels. Vashaee was awarded a $700,000 grant from the Air Force Office of
Scientific Research and a $200,000 grant from the National Science Foundation
to perform research associated with thermoelectrics.
New nanolaser key to future optical
computers and technologies
Purdue University August 17th, 2009 Demonstration
of SPASER-based Nanolaser M. A. Noginov1, G. Zhu1, A.
M. Belgrave1, R. Bakker2, V. M. Shalaev2, E. E. Narimanov2, S. Stout3, E.
Herz3, T. Suteewong3, U. Wiesner3 1 Center for Materials Research, Norfolk
State University; 2 School of Electrical & Computer Engineering and Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University; 4 Materials
Science and Engineering Department, Cornell University One of the most rapidly
growing areas of physics and nanotechnology focuses on plasmonic
effects on the nanometre scale, with possible
applications ranging from sensing and biomedicine to imaging and information
technology. However, the full development of nanoplasmonics
is hindered by the lack of devices that can generate
coherent plasmonic fields. It has
been proposed that in the same way as a laser generates stimulated
emission of coherent photons, a "spaser"
could generate stimulated emission of surface plasmons
(oscillations of free electrons in metallic nanostructures) in resonating
metallic nanostructures adjacent to a gain medium. But
attempts to realize a spaser face the challenge of
absorption loss in metal, which is particularly strong at optical frequencies.
The suggestion to compensate loss by optical gain in localized and propagating
surface plasmons has been
implemented recently and even allowed the amplification of propagating surface plasmons in open paths. Still, these experiments and
the reported enhancement of the stimulated emission of dye molecules in the
presence of metallic nanoparticles lack the feedback
mechanism present in a spaser. Here we show that
44-nm-diameter nanoparticles with a gold core and
dye-doped silica shell allow us to completely overcome the loss of localized
surface plasmons by gain and realize a spaser. And, in accord with the notion
that only surface plasmon resonances are capable of
squeezing optical frequency oscillations into a nanoscopic
cavity to enable a true nanolaser, we show that outcoupling of surface plasmon
oscillations to photonic modes at a wavelength of 531 nm makes our system the
smallest nanolaser reported to date - and to our
knowledge the first operating at visible wavelengths. We anticipate that
now, when it has been realized experimentally, the spaser will advance our fundamental understanding of nanoplasmonics and the development of practical
applications.
Stuttgart
Sets New Trends
Fraunhofer IPA August 17th, 2009 Stuttgart Nanodays 2009 is an international scientific conference
hosted by the Fraunhofer IPA (Institute for
Manufacturing Engineering and Automation) Stuttgart, Germany on 14-15 September
2009, focusing on visions for short- and medium-term carbon nanotube
applications.
Rice
nanotechnology expert available to discuss deaths reported in China
Rice University August 17th, 2009 Kristen Kulinowski, a Faculty Fellow in Chemistry at Rice
University and director of the International Council on Nanotechnology (ICON),
is available to discuss a new paper that purports to show nanoparticles
played a role in the deaths of two workers in China.
Nano-magnets
guide stem cells to damaged tissue
University College London August 17th, 2009 Microscopic
magnetic particles have been used to bring stem cells to sites of cardiovascular
injury in a new method designed to increase the capacity of cells to repair
damaged tissue, UCL scientists announced today.
IBM Scientists Use DNA Scaffolding To Build Tiny Circuit Boards:
Nanotechnology advancement could lead to smaller, faster, more energy efficient
computer chips
IBM Corporation August 17th, 2009 Today,
scientists at IBM (NYSE: IBM) Research and the California Institute of
Technology announced a scientific advancement that could be a major
breakthrough in enabling the semiconductor industry to pack more power and
speed into tiny computer chips, while making them more energy efficient and
less expensive to manufacture.
Dual
Devices by Pitt Researchers Harness Carbon Nanomaterials for Enhanced Drug
Delivery Systems, Oxygen Sensors
University of Pittsburgh August 17th, 2009 Researchers
describe carbon nanocapsules for drug and energy
storage in "Advanced Materials," creation of highly sensitive oxygen
sensors in "Nature Chemistry"
Advance
toward an 'electronic tongue' with a taste for sweets
American Chemical Society August 17th, 2009 In
a new approach to an effective "electronic tongue" that mimics human
taste, scientists in Illinois are reporting development of a small,
inexpensive, lab-on-a-chip sensor that quickly and accurately identifies
sweetness — one of the five primary tastes. It can identify with 100 percent
accuracy the full sweep of natural and artificial sweet substances, including
14 common sweeteners, using easy-to-read color markers. This sensory
"sweet-tooth" shows special promise as a simple quality control test
that food processors can use to ensure that soda pop, beer, and other beverages
taste great, — with a consistent, predictable flavor. Their study was described here today at the American Chemical Society's
238th National Meeting.
Secrets
of the sandcastle worm could yield a powerful medical adhesive
American Chemical Society August 17th, 2009 Scientists
have copied the natural glue secreted by a tiny sea creature called the
sandcastle worm in an effort to develop a long-sought medical adhesive needed
to repair bones shattered in battlefield injuries, car crashes and other
accidents. They reported on the adhesive here today at the 238th National
Meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS).
Flat
bacteria in nanoslits
Delft University of Technology August 17th, 2009 It appears that bacteria can squeeze
through practically anything. In extremely small nanoslits they take on a completely new flat shape.
Even in this squashed form they continue to grow and
divide at normal speeds. This has been demonstrated by
research carried out at TU Delft's Kavli Institute of
Nanoscience. The results will be appearing this week in the online edition of the
prestigious scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(PNAS) and as the cover article in the September 1 print issue of PNAS.
Researcher says microchannels could
advance tissue engineering methods
Texas A&M University August 17th, 2009 Utilizing
fractal patterns similar to those created by lightning strikes, Victor Ugaz, associate professor in the Artie McFerrin Department
of Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M University, has created a network of microchannels that could advance the field of tissue
engineering by serving as a three-dimensional vasculature for the support of
larger tissue constructs, such as human organs.
Organic
electronics a two-way street, thanks to new plastic semiconductor
University of Washington August 17th, 2009 Plastic
that conducts electricity holds promise for cheaper, thinner and more flexible
electronics. This technology is already available in some gadgets -- the new Sony
walkman that was introduced earlier this summer and
the Microsoft Zune HD music player released last week both incorporate organic
light-emitting electronic displays.
Tiny
robots get a grip on nanotubes
ITC Results August 17th, 2009 How
do you handle the tiny components needed for constructing nanoscale devices? A
European consortium has built two microrobotic
demonstrators that can automatically pick up and install carbon nanotubes
thousands of times thinner than a human hair. Carbon nanotubes,
rolled up sheets of carbon only a few tens of nanometres
in diameter, could become an essential part of the nanotechnologist's
construction kit. But there is a problem: how can you
handle objects which are so thin that they cannot be seen at all with a normal
optical microscope?
Imaging the inner workings of single molecules: NSF awards UCI
chemistry center $20 million
UC Irvine August 17th, 2009 With $20
million over five years from the National Science Foundation, UC Irvine
scientists hope to become the first ever to make real-time videos of single
molecules in action - a feat that has proved elusive because size and time
scales are so small.
Analyte sensing made easy
rsc.org August 18th, 2009 Spanish
scientists have made antibody-coated nanoparticles
that can detect bioanalytes indicative of drug abuse.
Ramón Alvarez-Puebla and colleagues at the
New
material for nanoscale-computer chips
University of Copenhagen August 18th, 2009 New
data from Chinese-Danish collaboration shows that organic nanoscale wires could
be an alternative to silicon in computer chips. The discovery has just been published in the respected scientific journal,
Advanced Materials.
New
DNA Test Uses Nanotechnology to Find Early Signs of Cancer
CNano Technology Receives EPA Approval for Carbon Nanotubes
CNano August 18th, 2009 CNano
Technology Limited (CNano) announced that it has
received regulatory approval from the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) to sell multi-wall carbon nanotubes (MWNTs)
through its subsidiary in the USA. This approval of consent order places CNano on the short list of manufacturers approved to supply
MWNTs in the
Full
recovery of global economy to appear at least in 2012: CEO of the US research
firm
en.trend.az August 18th, 2009 The
global economy can overcome the recession at least in 5 years, Professor,
President of the U.S. World Marketing research firm, Gene Aldridge believes.
Aldridge now believes that new economic development strategies are needed for emerging nations especially in Latin American
and
Profitable
Method Found for Drug Delivery by Nanotechnology
farsnews.com August 18th, 2009 Findings of
a new study by Iranian chemists revealed a new method for synthesizing nanocapsules capable of controlled drug release, leading to
profitable drug delivery in medical industry. Recently, polymer bio-degradable nanoparticles have
been in center of attentions, these nanoparticles can
deliver the drug to the target tissue in a controlled and effective way.
Micelle nanoparticles release the drug in the body
slowly, because of their interaction with central hydrophobe
of nanoparticle, but nanocapsules,
because of their thin layer, release the drug faster," said Sepideh Khoee, an academic member
of
Now,
a minuscule rival for Viagra
taragana.com August 18th, 2009 By using
nanotechnology - the science of tiny particles - researchers have created a
fast-acting treatment for impotence that could rival Viagra. The treatment has so far only been tested in animals but the researchers
behind it say the same approach could also benefit humans. Viagra and other
drugs take time to show their effects, as they have to be
taken orally. Some users can suffer side-effects
such as headaches, facial flushing and indigestion, reports The Times. The nanoparticle approach, by contrast, worked in less than 10
minutes and its effects seem to be limited to the relevant parts of the body,
according to the researchers. Kelvin Davies of the Albert Einstein College of
Medicine in
'Cornell
dots' make the world's tiniest laser
Cornell University August 18th, 2009 Researchers
have modified nanoparticles known as "Cornell
dots" to make the world's tiniest laser -- so small it could be
incorporated into microchips to serve as a light source for photonic circuits.
The device may also have applications for sensors, solar collectors and in
biomedicine.
New
publications show application of latest GPC/SEC detection technology
Malvern Instruments August 18th, 2009 Available
free on Viscotek website
Nuclear
fusion research key to advancing computer chips
Purdue University August 18th, 2009 Researchers
are adapting the same methods used in fusion-energy research to create
extremely thin plasma beams for a new class of "nanolithography"
required to make future computer chips.
NSF
Emerging Frontiers' program supports development of smart materials based on
study of fish
Virginia Tech August 19th,
2009 After engineers and scientists at Virginia Tech, Harvard and
Drexel finish studying the locomotion of fish in water, Michael Phelps may find
he still has a few new ways to increase his own world-breaking Olympic times.
New approach to wound healing may be easy on skin, but hard on
bacteria
University of Wisconsin-Madison August 19th, 2009 In
a presentation today (Aug. 19) to the American Chemical Society meeting, Ankit Agarwal, a postdoctoral
researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, described an experimental
approach to wound healing that could take advantage of silver's antibacterial
properties, while sidestepping the damage silver can cause to cells needed for
healing.
Nanoparticle safety in doubt
nature.com August 19th, 2009 Claims that
seven Chinese factory workers developed severe lung damage from inhaling nanoparticles are stoking the debate over the
environmental-health effects of nanotechnology. A paper published in the
European Respiratory Journal claims to be the first to document cases of ill
health caused by nanoparticles in humans (Y. Song, X.
Li and X. Du Eur. Respir. J. 34,
559-567; 2009). Other experts are sceptical as
to whether nanoparticles are actually to blame, but
the paper has triggered lively discussions. "The study raises the bar for doing
appropriate research as fast as possible to find out where the dangers might
lie when working with nanomaterials," says Andrew Maynard, a
nanotechnology expert at the
DNA-Coated
Nanotubes Help Kill Tumors Without Harm to Surrounding Tissue
Wake Forest University School of Medicine August 19th,
2009 Researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine have
destroyed prostate cancer tumors in mice by injecting them with
specially-coated, miniscule carbon tubes and then superheating the tubes with a
brief zap of a laser.
Rusnano Will Sharply Boost Spending
themoscowtimes.com August 19th, 2009 Rusnano will approve 40 billion rubles ($1.25 billion)
worth of investment this year, one-third more than it planned in May, a
spokeswoman said Wednesday. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said earlier
Wednesday that Rusnano would approve investment into
50 projects this year that will require 80 billion rubles of funding. Rusnano spokeswoman Irina Shabanova said the state corporation would chip in 40
billion rubles of that money. Anatoly Chubais, the
corporation's chief, said in May that the plan was to invest 28 billion rubles
this year.
AF
Research Lab scientist wins award for groundbreaking research
USAF August 19th, 2009 Dr. Paul Barnes, an
Air Force Research Lab scientist, has been selected as the winner of a 2009
Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, or STEM, award. Dr. Barnes
has received the John L. McLucas Basic Research STEM Award for of his
outstanding scientific achievements in superconducting materials.
A
safe approach to nanotechnology
eurekalert.org August 19th,
2009 A non-toxic and environmentally friendly way to make tiny nanorods of zinc oxide has been developed for the first
time by researchers in
Major
Japanese company announces Northwest research collaboration
Northwest Regional Development Agency August 19th, 2009 Murata
Manufacturing Co. Ltd, a Japan based manufacturer, has selected Professor Paul
O'Brien and his research team in the School of Chemistry at the University of
Manchester to form a research collaboration, with help from the Northwest
Regional Development Agency (NWDA).
Canadian
Manufacturing Technology Show, October 19-22, Reinforces Importance of
Technological Innovations in a Tough Economy
cienmagazine.com August 19th, 2009 The
Canadian Manufacturing Show is Canada's definitive showcase for the latest
machine tools, automation technologies, metal forming, measurement
technologies, tooling solutions, production methods and management strategies.
From three-dimensional visualization technique, nanotechnology and robotics to
smart grids, green technologies and rapid prototyping, it provides an in-depth
look at technological innovation and the resources businesses need to improve
-- or reinvent -- their manufacturing processes.
Gold
nanoparticles detect cancer
rsc.org August 19th, 2009 In
the new study, Jicun Ren and
colleagues at
Oerlikon Solar
and Rusnano/Renova Joint Venture open up Russian
market for leading thin film solar PV technology
Oerlikon Solar August 20th, 2009 Joint Venture of Rusnano and Renova places 120 MW
end-to-end line order with Oerlikon Solar for factory
in the Chuvash Republic, Russia * Largest production equipment order to-date in
2009 for thin film PV market * Micromorph® PV
technology establishes a foothold in Russia * Oerlikon
Solar's Micromorph®
technology gaining momentum
Bio-enabled,
Surface-mediated Approach Produces Nanoparticle
Composites
US
develops targeted cancer treatment by nanomaterials
chinadaily.com August 20th, 2009 US
Scientists have developed a way to targeted brain cancer cells using inorganic
titanium dioxide nanoparticles bonded to soft
biological material, the the US Department of
Energy's Argonne National Laboratory said Wednesday. Thousands of people die
from malignanat brain tumors every year, and the
tumors are resistant to conventional therapies. This nano-bio technology may
eventually provide an alternative form of therapy that targets only cancer
cells and does not affect normal living tissue. "It is a real example of
how nano and biological interfacing can be used for biomedical
application," said scientist Elena Rozhkova with
New
research project at Manchester university
ukinvest.gov.uk August 20th,
2009 Skilled staff from Murata Manufacturing will receive
specialist training in the research and development of nanotechnology as part
of the deal. In return, Professor Paul O'Brien and his research team in the
school of chemistry will gain access to skills and state-of-the-art equipment
in
"Wedding
Cake" Images Display Transitions between Exotic Quantum States
National Science Foundation August 20th,
2009 From superfluid to Mott insulator,
density profiles of ultracold atomic gases reveal
secrets of quantum phase transitions
Oakland
Community College expands into nanotech
metromodemedia.com August 20th,
2009
OCC
Launches New Nanotechnology Program - Scholarships Available
Oakland Community College August 20th, 2009 For
the first time this September Oakland Community College will offer courses in
its new associate of applied science degree in the cutting-edge field of
nanotechnology at the Auburn Hills Campus. Nanotechnology is the study of the
control of matter on a molecular and atomic level with wide-ranging
applications in medicine, electronics and energy production.
China
Reports the First Human Nano-Fatalities
popsci.com August 20th, 2009 Two
women in
NRC:
Emerging Technologies Thrive in Canada
National Research Council August 20th,
2009 Government of Canada recognizes Quantiam
Technologies Inc. as a Canadian Innovation Leader
A
Partnership for improved Diagnostics
Max Planck Gesellschaft
August 20th, 2009 Max Planck Innovation and PerkinElmer conclude a
licensing agreement for highly efficient detectors for medical technology
Summary
of Finnish High-Tech Company Capital Raising Activity - H109
pr-inside.com August 20th, 2009 Nanotechnology
companies managed to raise more capital, with three companies closing deals
worth €12.7 million, setting the average investment size at €4.2 million.
UWSP
professor makes nanotech discovery
wausaudailyherald.com August 20th, 2009 Research
at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point could potentially revolutionize
nanotechnology production and put Wisconsin at the forefront of the high-tech
industry. Chemistry professor Michael Zach has developed a method of making
large quantities of patterned nanowires by reusing
the wire's template, like a rubber stamp. Typically, a pattern is destroyed in the making of one wire. Zach's process would
drastically cut the time needed to create a significant number of nanowires. It currently takes about two and a half weeks to
make a gram, Zach said, but his process trims that to about 13 hours, with
potential for faster times. Cutting that time so significantly would allow
scientists to expand their ideas on how to use the microscopic wires, which are commonly used in computer chips as conductors or
semi-conductors.
Tin(IV) Oxide Nanoparticles
Decrease Pollutants Faster
farsnews.com August 20th, 2009 According to
the Iranian Nanotechnology Initiative Council (en.nano.ir),
unfortunately, wastes from many industries including textile, leather, rubber,
paint, etc enter and pollute the environment every day. Armed with
nanotechnology, Iranian scientists are determined to battle against these
threats against environment. "Tin(IV) oxide
(SnO2) is a n-type semiconductor. This chemical can be used in metals protection
against corrosion, electrochromism devices, photocatalysts and electro-photocatalysts
in REDOX reactions, reduction of dye or other environmental pollutants, and gas
sensors," Ali Hasanzadeh, head of nanotechnology
research center of the
Argonne
scientist named one of the world's top innovators
Argonne National Laboratory August 21st, 2009 Elena
Shevchenko, nanoscientist at the U.S. Department of
Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory, has joined a select list of the
world's youngest top innovators chosen by Technology Review magazine for her
work at Argonne's Center for Nanoscale Materials.
Argonne, University of Chicago scientists develop targeted cancer
treatment using nanomaterials: Nano-bio material kills cancer cells, leaves
healthy cells unharmed
Argonne National Laboratory August 21st, 2009 Scientists
from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory and the
University of Chicago's Brain Tumor Center have developed a way to target brain
cancer cells using inorganic titanium dioxide nanoparticles
bonded to soft biological material.
SOURCE:
NANOTECHWEB.ORG NEWSWIRE
TECHNOLOGY
UPDATE
Scaling
up graphene production using organic dispersion
Simple, high-yield method to produce nanosheets
developed by Rice scientists
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40098
Switching
light on and off in nanotubes
IBM
result crucial for future CNT applications in nano-optoelectronics and
photonics
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40088
Inverse
nanosphere lithography orders CNT array Masking method might benefit mobile phones, solar-cell
electrodes, super capacitors and field emitters
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40081
New
form of carbon created
Multilayer
epitaxial graphene could drive down the cost of
carbon electronics
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40056
Exposing
the flaw in Planck’s law
A
novel cantilever uncovers a tremendous hike in radiation transfer at the
nanoscale
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40057
BUYERS
GUIDE SPOTLIGHT - SCANNING PROBE MICROSCOPY
Sponsored
by Nanonis - The SPM Application Experts Nanonis develops laboratory equipment for nanotechnology
research
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/company/B500014533
Info
category
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/companies/category/652
Next
week's topic - Venture capital
To
sponsor a category, email david.iddon@iop.org
IN
DEPTH
Focus
on micro- and nanofluidics
Free-to-read
articles on measuring or manipulating flows at the scale of a few hundred
microns or smaller
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/indepth/40066
LAB
TALK
Modified
SEMs get e-beam lithography bonus Positioning method
simplifies the integration of nanowires into
suspended structures
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40074
Magnetic
nanomaterials gear up for multimodal cancer therapy Composite
nanoparticles generate heat and release useful
quantities of drugs when exposed to an alternating magnetic field
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40073
Pyrene series reveals electronic-grade CNTs
in solution Scalable chemical method separates metallic and semiconducting
carbon nanotubes
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40053
The 2008 ISI impact factor for Nanotechnology has risen to 3.446 http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/Nano
MOST-ACCESSED NANOTECHNOLOGY ARTICLES
Free-to-read
showcase of the journal's most-accessed papers.
http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/-page=extra.accessed/0957-4484
NANOTECHNOLOGY
JOURNAL COVER GALLERY
SOURCE: New RFPs From NineSigma
|
||
|
|
Archive @ www.chem.usu.edu/~tapaskar
To subscribe/unsubscribe – please
send email to tapas.kar@usu.edu