24/7 News Coverage
June 03, 2014
NANO TECH
Unexpected water explains surface chemistry of nanocrystals
Berkeley CA (SPX) Jun 01, 2014
Danylo Zherebetskyy and his colleagues at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) found unexpected traces of water in semiconducting nanocrystals. The water as a source of small ions for the surface of colloidal lead sulfide (PbS) nanoparticles allowed the team to explain just how the surface of these important particles are passivated, meaning how they achieve an overall balance of positive and negative ions. This has been a big question for some fifte ... read more
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NANO TECH

DNA nanotechnology places enzyme catalysis within an arm's length
Using molecules of DNA like an architectural scaffold, Arizona State University scientists, in collaboration with colleagues at the University of Michigan, have developed a 3-D artificial enzyme cas ... more
ENERGY TECH

Breakthrough in energy storage: Electrical cables that can store energy
Imagine being able to carry all the juice you needed to power your MP3 player, smartphone and electric car in the fabric of your jacket? Sounds like science fiction, but it may become a reality than ... more
TECH SPACE

Scientists unveil first method for controlling the growth of metal crystals
Researchers have announced the first ever method for controlling the growth of metal-crystals from single atoms. Published in the journal Nature Communications and developed at the University of War ... more
Nano Technology News from NanoDaily.com


TECH SPACE

NIST studies why quantum dots suffer from 'fluorescence intermittency'
Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), working in collaboration with the Naval Research Laboratory, have found that a particular species of quantum dots that weren ... more


NANO TECH

Bending helps to control nanomaterials
A new remedy has been found to tackle the difficulty of controlling layered nanomaterials. Control can be improved by simply bending the material. The mechanism was observed by Academy Researc ... more
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NANO TECH

Engineers build world's smallest, fastest nanomotor
Researchers at the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin have built the smallest, fastest and longest-running tiny synthetic motor to date. The team's nanomotor is an i ... more
STATION NEWS

Rounding up the BCATs on the ISS
Although it may not be herding cats exactly, all the NASA-supported Binary Colloidal Alloy Tests (BCAT) studies have ended on the International Space Station, and the experimental samples are being ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Living microbes identified in Earth's driest desert using new technique
Eight dead, 17 hurt, in China school knife attack; Police formally arrest car ramming suspect
COP16 biodiversity finance deal for 'early 2025': presidency
NANO TECH

Nanoscale heat flow predictions
Physicists are now designing novel materials with physical properties tailored to meet specific energy consumption needs. Before these so-called materials-by-design can be applied, it is essential t ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA

Organism that transmits added letters in DNA alphabet created
Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have engineered a bacterium whose genetic material includes an added pair of DNA "letters," or bases, not found in nature. The cells of this uniqu ... more
NANO TECH

Harnessing Magnetic Vortices for Making Nanoscale Antennas
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory are seeking ways to synchronize the magnetic spins in nanoscale devices to build tiny yet more powerful signal-generating ... more
Startup in the Land of the Rising Sun; A Japanese Solar Venture - by Bradley L. Bartz


NANO TECH

New method for measuring the temperature of nanoscale objects discovered
Temperature measurements in our daily life are typically performed by bringing a thermometer in contact with the object to be measured. However, measuring the temperature of nanoscale objects is a m ... more
TECH SPACE

Fluorescent hybrid material changes colour according to the direction of the light
The UPV/EHU's Molecular Spectroscopy Group, in collaboration with the Institute of Catalysis and Petroleum Chemistry of the CSIC (Spanish National Research Council), has developed a highly fluoresce ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Next Starship Flight Test Scheduled for Tuesday with 30-Minute Launch Window
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TIME AND SPACE

Economics = MC2 A portrait of the modern physics startup
For much of the 20th century, many of the technological innovations that drove U.S. economic growth emerged from "idea factories" housed within large companies - research units like Bell Labs or Xe ... more
NANO TECH

Nanomaterial Outsmarts Ions
Ions are an essential tool in chip manufacturing, but these electrically charged atoms can also be used to produce nano-sieves with homogeneously distributed pores. A particularly large number of el ... more
NANO TECH

World's thinnest nanowires created by Vanderbilt grad student
A Vanderbilt doctorate student has found a way to construct the world's thinnest nanowire - at just three atoms wide - using a finely focused beam of electrons. ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Proving uncertainty: New insight into old problem
Nearly 90 years after Werner Heisenberg pioneered his uncertainty principle, a group of researchers from three countries has provided substantial new insight into this fundamental tenet of quantum p ... more
NANO TECH

How to create nanowires only three atoms wide with an electron beam
Junhao Lin, a Vanderbilt University Ph.D. student and visiting scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), has found a way to use a finely focused beam of electrons to create some of the smal ... more

NANO TECH

Fluorescent-based tool reveals how medical nanoparticles biodegrade in real time
have been heralded as a potential "disruptive technology" in biomedicine, a versatile platform that could supplant conventional technologies, both as drug delivery vehicles and diagnostic tools. ... more
NANO TECH

Cloaked DNA nanodevices survive pilot mission
It's a familiar trope in science fiction: In enemy territory, activate your cloaking device. And real-world viruses use similar tactics to make themselves invisible to the immune system. Now scienti ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Biden clears Ukraine for long-range missile strikes inside Russia
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NATO's largest artillery exercise underway in Finland
NANO TECH

Nano shake-up

INTERNET SPACE

Combs of Light Accelerate Communication

CARBON WORLDS

Virus structure inspires novel understanding of onion-like carbon nanoparticles

NANO TECH

The Motion of the Medium Matters for Self-assembling Particles

NANO TECH

Never say never in the nano-world

NANO TECH

Nanosheets and nanowires

NANO TECH

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NANO TECH

Scientists watch nanoparticles grow

TECH SPACE

LockMart Opens Advanced Materials and Thermal Sciences Center In Palo Alto

NANO TECH

Nanotube coating helps shrink mass spectrometers

Researchers Grow Carbon Nanofibers Using Ambient Air, Without Toxic Ammonia

A new concept for manufacturing wrinkling patterns on hard-nano-film/soft-matter-substrate

Toward 'vanishing' electronics and unlocking nanomaterials' power potential

Nanoscale optical switch breaks miniaturization barrier

Bionic plants

Chelyabinsk meteor to help develop nanotechnology

Waterloo physicists solve 20-year-old debate surrounding glassy surfaces

Optical nano-tweezers take over the control of nano-objects

NIST microanalysis technique makes the most of small nanoparticle samples

Experts warn against nanosilver

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