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Science Forum Index » Nanotechnology Forum » This Week in Nanotech 10.01.03 - 10.06.03
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| Aryavarta Kumar |
Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2003 7:49 am |
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T H I S W E E K I N N A N O T E C H
NanoScience and NanoBusiness News from NanoApex
Dear Subscribers,
This Week in Nanotech covers research and commercialization of MEMS
and nanotech from around the world, the emerging marketplace, and its
many players. This Week in Nanotech is your complete weekly update on
everything going on in the world of tiny tech. Get your business
information from NanoInvestorNews, hosting the largest nanocompany
database in existence with over 600 entries.
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NANOSCIENCE NEWS
EuroNanoForum 2003
The European Commission is organising, in the framework of the Italian
Presidency, a large conference devoted to the progress in nanosciences
and nanotechnologies: the EuroNanoForum 2003, to be held in Trieste,
Italy, on 9-12 December 2003, with the participation of many top-level
scientists and stakeholders, mainly from Europe but also from several
other Countries: please set a bookmark to www.euronanoforum2003.org
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3907
Lasers create new possibilities for biological technology
A team of researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder has
taken another step in the quest to build a compact, tabletop x-ray
microscope that could be used for biological imaging at super-high
resolution. By firing a femtosecond laser - a laser that generates
light pulses with durations as short as 100 trillionth of a second -
through a gas-filled tube called a waveguide, they were able to create
more efficient "laser-like" beams in regions of the spectrum that were
previously inaccessible. The wavelength region over which they
generate this "soft" x-ray light efficiently is called the
"water-window" region, an important region for biological imaging,
according to physics Professor Margaret Murnane. She also is a fellow
of JILA, a joint institute of CU-Boulder and the National Institute of
Standards and Technology.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3906
Quick-Change Stuff
What if soldiers' uniforms repaired rips or tears on their own? And
those uniforms could change color to blend in anywhere? As this
ScienCentral News video reports, some nanotechnologists are working on
smart stuff that could fix itself or change color for protection the
way living things do.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3905
Nanotubes Harvest Electrons
Researchers from the University of Bologna and the University of
Trieste in Italy, and the University of Notre Dame have found a way to
alter carbon nanotubes so that they efficiently separate electrical
charge. The method could lead to more efficient solar cells.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3904
Forging nanochannels without nanolithography
Scientists from the California Institute of Technology, US, have come
up with a way of making nanochannels without using nanolithography.
The process employs basic CMOS fabrication techniques such as
chemical-mechanical polishing and thermal oxidation.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3903
Nanoimprint lithography stamps organic lasers
Researchers in Italy have used a technique known as nanoimprint
lithography to fabricate an organic distributed feedback (DFB) laser
at room temperature. The resulting laser has a peak single-mode
emission at 637 nm and a linewidth of less than 0.7 nm (Applied
Physics Letters 83 2545).
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3902
HexFlex manipulates nanoscopic cables
Assembling a machine sounds straightforward, but what if the
components of that machine are nanoscopic? Similarly, bringing
together the ends of two cables is simple unless those cables have a
core diameter many times smaller than a human hair, as is the case
with fiber optics. Although there are devices on the market with
similar credentials, they are expensive and have inherent limitations.
Using a fundamentally new design, an MIT team has invented the HexFlex
Nanomanipulator that's not only inexpensive but performs better in
many ways than its competitors. HexFlex, developed by MIT inventors
led by Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering Martin Culpepper,
has won a 2003 R&D 100 Award. The awards honor the 100 most
technologically significant new products and processes, as determined
by the editors of R&D magazine and more than 50 experts.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3901
New Surface Can Find Different Twists on a Molecular Theme
ARLINGTON, Va.Researchers have created a new process to produce
materials that can sift through similar, molecular brethren and latch
onto chemicals that differ from each other in only their mirrored
images. If it proves effective in large-scale experiments, the stable,
relatively simple catalyst could impact the $100 billion
pharmaceutical industry by helping sort biologically potent chemicals
from related, yet less useful or even toxic, compatriots. Jay Switzer
and colleagues at the University of Missouri at Rolla announce their
discovery in the October 2, 2003, issue of the journal Nature. The
research was funded primarily by the Division of Chemistry and the
Division of Material Research at the National Science Foundation
(NSF), the independent federal agency that supports research and
education across all fields of science and engineering.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3900
Organic polymers to precede nano semi
With the advent of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), organic
semiconductors have thrown down the gauntlet as alternatives to
silicon in some applications. But there remains a large
hurdle-inexpensive "weather proofing" to ensure a long life.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3899
A futurist's view
With smart dust, surgical robots, transgenic replacement organs and a
150-year life span now conceivable, Richard Satava says now is the
time to face the ethical challenges that technology will bring to
medicine.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3898
Nanoparticle safety concerns will be focus of UK nanotechnology study
In a first progress report, the UK's Royal Society has laid down the
priorities for its study on nanotechnology. Nanotechnology is high up
on the EU's research agenda, granting this area a specific budget of
over 700 million euro in its 6th Framework Programme for Research.
However, there is no debate yet at EU level on the opportunities and
dangers of this new technology, nor on the societal and environmental
implications.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3897
ISN projects include waterproof, antibacterial fabric
Although the 21st-century equivalent of chain mail is many years away,
other projects underway through MIT's Institute for Soldier
Nanotechnologies could aid the soldier within the next five years. On
Sept. 22, at the beginning of a four-day ISN annual review, MIT
scientists gave highlights of ISN research in three key areas:
protection, injury intervention and cure, and performance improvement.
They also described "lower-hanging fruit" that could be ready
relatively soon, such as an ultra-waterproof, antibacterial fabric for
battle suits. "The ISN is about basic research, but it's also about
moving [that research] forward to impact the soldier," said Edwin
Thomas, ISN director and a professor in the Department of Materials
Science and Engineering. He noted that MIT and its faculty are very
good at technology transfer. Of the 37 ISN faculty, 22 have founded a
total of 29 companies.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3896
Nanotube helium sensors could bring atom beam microscope
Scientists from the University of Cambridge, UK, have come up with a
high-efficiency technique for detecting neutral atoms such as helium.
The researchers used multiwalled carbon nanotubes under a positive
bias to field-ionize passing gas atoms.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3895
Will Brit buses burn cleaner under the Cerulean sky?
Nanotechnology company Cerulean International is going to try to do to
England what it's done to Hong Kong: cut fuel consumption in city
buses. Cerulean is a subsidiary of the British nanomaterials company
Oxonica. Small Times reported back in 2001 that the company would test
its nanoparticle fuel additive on Hong Kong's city buses.Apparently,
the test was a success.For the complete commentary, please see Howard
Lovy's NanoBot.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3894
Water for peace
The International Herald Tribune is noting Israel's new emphasis on
nanotechnology not only as a tool of economic recovery, but also of
"national importance." I'd probably change that wording to "national
survival."The paper mentions Israel's focus on nanotech for water
desalination. Despite the media's almost-complete focus on the
religious and nationalist struggles in the Mideast, the Israeli-Arab
conflict is also about competition over scarce natural resources such
as fresh water.I'm under no illusions that nanotech could create a
true oasis of peace in the Middle East, but it could not hurt for this
little-publicized element of the conflict to go away. For the complete
commentary, please see Howard Lovy's NanoBot.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3893
U.K. recognizes importance of perception
What sets the British nanotech advisory process above others,
including the United States', is its simultaneous study of public
attitudes toward nanotechnology. The group is inviting market research
companies to survey "1000-2000 people to establish what is the
awareness of nanotechnology amongst members of the public" and to hold
"workshops with members of the public to explore their ideas about
nanotechnology, and to identify and discuss any potential concerns or
questions that might arise." There will also be a monthlong "Web
consultation" to allow anyone to (just love the genteel British
wording) "engage with the project and inform the working group's
thinking."The British working group should be applauded for
recognizing early the importance of public perception -- oftentimes
wholly divorced from fact yet just as important a consideration as
real science -- when formulating public policy.For the full
commentary, please see Howard Lovy's NanoBot.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3892
______________________________________
NANOBUSINESS NEWS
Zyvex Releases Four New Products
Zyvex continues to lead the industry with its high-paced product
development
Zyvex Corporation [profile], a leader in nanotechnology products and
services, today announced four new product releases: Zyvex Dried Film
(ZDF) Carbon Nanotube Solutions, Zyvex Microgrippers, Zyvex NanoSharp
Probes, and Zyvex MEMulator Software. Zyvex's materials and process
engineering technology leverages the revolutionary discovery of
carbon-based nanostructures with high-volume, composite material
production techniques. Zyvex Dried Film (ZDF) removes the "processing
bottleneck" for carbon nanotubes enabling a wealth of new
applications. Zyvex's patent-pending technology disperses and suspends
carbon nanotubes in common solvents with unsurpassed concentration and
dispersion. ZDF dissolves in common organic solvents and easily mixes
with a variety of other materials, creating high-performance
composites.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1946
MKS Instruments Acquires MEMS-Based Vacuum Gauging Technology
Andover, Massachusetts, September 30, 2003 - MKS Instruments, Inc.
[profile] (Nasdaq: MKSI), a leading provider of process control
technologies for improving productivity in semiconductor and other
advanced manufacturing process environments, announced it expanded its
vacuum gauging technology portfolio by acquiring
MicroElectroMechanical System (MEMS)-based technology through the
acquisition of privately held Wenzel Instruments, based in Hellebaek,
Denmark. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1945
pSivida: $6.5M Capital Raising Closes Heavily Oversubscribed
pSivida to develop wholly owned diagnostics business pSivida to
increase shareholding in pSiMedica
pSivida Limited [profile] (ASX: PSD), is pleased to announce the
placement of 13 million paid ordinary shares at $0.50 to raise $6.5
million through Burdett Buckeridge Young Limited with Australian and
European institutions and sophisticated investors.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1944
Fujitsu develops high-speed multichannel optical switch based on MEMS
mirrors
29 September 2003 Tokyo Lightwave-- Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. and
Fujitsu Ltd. today announced the development of an 80-channel optical
communications switch that adopts MEMS mirrors. The new device
achieves a 1-msec switching speed, the fastest of any multi-channel
optical switch to date, according to the company. The new switch is
expected to enable the development of the optical crossconnect systems
essential for next-generation optical transmission networks.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1943
Clemson photonics research gets economic development nod from NSF
The track record of Clemson University's photonics research
-attracting more than $13 million in outside funding in three years
- has earned it the National Science Foundation's economic
development stamp of approval. The $600,000 "stamp" - a grant from
the prestigious NSF Partnerships for Innovation program - paves the
way for an extended regional partnership that will create the
innovation infrastructure needed to commercialize the photonics
research conducted at Clemson. Business leaders hailed the move, which
is expected to attract high-paying, knowledge-based industries to the
region.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1942
Get Ready For The Age Of Nanotechnology
Nanometer structures will foster a revolution in information
technology hardware rivaling the microelectronics revolution begun 30
years ago." -- The National Science and Technology Council We are
entering the Nanotechnology Age, an epoch more significant than any
preceding age identified by any one material such as stone, bronze,
iron or silicon. Nanotechnology's ability to work at the molecular
level changes our ability to use all materials.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1941
Chairman talks up PPG's $300 million R&D program
Raymond LeBoeuf takes his history very seriously. A history and
political science major at Northwestern University, the chairman of
PPG Industries has a knack for dates and a penchant for recalling
events significant in shaping how his company does business.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1940
HP Researchers Make Tiny Memory from Molecules
Researchers at U.S. computer company Hewlett-Packard [profile] said on
Monday they had created a computer memory chip using new molecular
technology that takes miniaturization further than ever before.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1939
STAIN-RESISTANT PANTS ARE SO LAST WEEK'; TRY THE ODOR-FREE SOCKS
One of the hottest trends in the fashion industry today is invisible
to the naked eye. Nanoscale enhancements to classic materials like
cotton and novel nanoengineering of synthetic fibers are leading to
the high-tech couture of tomorrow. But wash, wear, and wipe duds are
just the first swatches of nano-tech to make it onto garment racks.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1938
A FULL-COLOR PROTOTYPE MAY FINALLY DELIVER ON NANOTUBE TV PROMISES
Applied Nanotech Inc. [profile] might beat a bunch of hopefuls in
developing the first carbon nanotube field emission device (CNT-FED)
television. If ANI delivers, the realization of CNT-FED technologies
for a mass market after 2005 could become a reality after many
promises but few actual products, according to some of the
technology's critics.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1937
Why Isn't Nano Just a Fad? (Part I)
We get asked this question all the time. What amazes me is the
skepticism that many in the investment world have toward
nanotechnology. When the head of asset management at Goldman Sachs
went on record saying "Run in the other direction" from any investment
"with the word nano appended to it", I have to wonder. Do Goldman and
other skeptics realize....
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1936
STMicroelectronics Announces Advanced R&D Program Targeting Low Cost
Solar Cells
Catania, Italy, September 30, 2003 - STMicroelectronics [profile]
(NYSE: STM), one of the world's leading manufacturers of semiconductor
devices, today released details of an advanced research program that
it hopes will substantially reduce the cost of generating electricity
from solar power. The research team, based in Catania and Naples,
Italy, is focusing on applying ST's expertise in nanotechnology to the
development of new solar cell technologies that will eventually be
able to compete commercially with conventional electricity generation
methods such as burning fossil fuels or nuclear reactors.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1935
World's Largest Utility Company, Groupe Electricit De France, Moves
Forward With Konarka Technologies, Inc.
Paris, France and Lowell, MA --September 29th, 2003-- Konarka
Technologies, Inc. [profile], today announced that it has entered into
a cooperation with Groupe Electricit de France (EDF). EDF is the
world's largest utility, operating a diverse portfolio of 120,000+
megawatts of generation capacity in Europe, Latin America, Asia, the
Middle-East and Africa, and it serves 45 million customers worldwide.
Working through EDF's Easenergy team based in the Silicon Valley, the
companies will collaborate to develop and launch Konarka's polymer
photovoltaic products into the global market to provide a source of
renewable power in a variety of form factors for commercial,
industrial, government and consumer applications. Konarka's
photovoltaic nanotechnology is focused on delivering lightweight,
flexible, scalable and manufacturable products. In a fraction of a
day, the sun delivers enough energy to supply the world's power needs
for a year. Konarka's technology converts sunlight as well as indoor,
artificial light into direct current electrical power. The company
uses unique, proprietary low-temperature production methods to put the
photovoltaic cells onto flexible, lightweight plastics. Under the
terms of the agreement with Konarka, EDF will contribute expertise
from its European operations to accelerate the development and
roll-out of Konarka's polymer photovoltaic products.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1934
The National Science & Technology Education Partnership Announces
Strategic Partnership with the NanoBusiness Alliance
Arlington, VA The NanoBusiness Alliance and The National Science &
Technology Education Partnership (NSTEP) have formed a strategic
relationship to advance nanotechnology youth education and expansion
of the science and technology workforce pipeline. "The National
Nanotechnology Initiative has identified grades K-12 as key to
developing tomorrow's nanotech workforce," said Kathy Warye, president
of NSTEP. "In creating this partnership with the NanoBusiness
Alliance, we will be able to help support NNI's goals in primary and
secondary education, and to expand nanotech's exposure in America's
science classrooms."
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1933
Omron Develops World's First Frontlight Technology for Creating
Brighter, Clearer Wireless Handheld LCD Screens
Tokyo, Japan, Oct 01, 2003 - (JCN Newswire) - Omron Corporation
[profile] (TSE: 6645) has developed the world's first* frontlight
manufacturing technology capable of making brighter, clearer liquid
display screens while reducing power consumption for wireless
handheld's, PDA's and other mobile information terminals. The new
technology will be on exhibit from October 7 - 11 at the CEATEC JAPAN
2003 show to be held at the Makuhari Messe near Tokyo in Chiba
Prefecture. The frontlight manufacturing technique, which applies
nanotechnology, achieves a three-fold improvement in contrast ratio
compared to frontlights manufactured by other companies, and screen
brightness rivaling that of notebook computers (100cd/m2) through
highly efficient light control.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1932
Plasma Screens and the Future of Display Technology
Will plasma displays be run out of the big-screen market by one or
several new technologies? Meet NED, OLED and some other new
technologies that are almost ready for prime time. In the
ever-expanding arena of large-display technology , is plasma here to
stay? "Plasma displays, I think, are a very awkward technology," James
Jaskie, chief scientist at Motorola's [profile] (NYSE: MOT)
Microelectronics and Physical Sciences Laboratory, told TechNewsWorld.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1931
Infineon Technologies Establishes Presence in New York City
Targeting a Top Five Market Position with 5 Percent Market Share in
North America by 2005
NEW YORK--Sept. 30, 2003--Dr. Ulrich Schumacher, President and CEO of
Infineon Technologies [profile] (NYSE:IFX)(FSE:IFX), the world's sixth
largest semiconductor company, reaffirmed his commitment to growing
the company's presence in North America, with the opening of its
latest U.S. office facility in New York City, the world's largest
capital market. The facility, located on Broadway near Union Square,
will serve as a platform for Infineon to promote its brand to key
financial, political and commercial audiences and will help to achieve
its strategic goal of establishing the company as a consistent
top-five supplier in the North American semiconductor market.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1930
New NIH Roadmap Promotes Systems Biology, Multidisciplinary Research
NEW YORK, Sept. 30 (GenomeWeb News) - Elias Zerhouni, director of the
National Institutes of Health, today identified systems biology and
multidisciplinary research as key components in a new set of agency
initiatives dubbed the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research. The roadmap
was created to highlight "major opportunities and gaps in biomedical
research that no single institute at NIH could tackle alone, but that
the agency still needed to address," according to an NIH statement.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1929
Showa Denko K.K. (SDK) and Prof. Endo to Form Carbon Nanofiber Joint
Venture
Tokyo, Japan, Sept. 30, 2003 - (JCN Newswire) - Prof. Morinobu Endo,
Faculty of Engineering, Shinshu University, and Showa Denko K.K.
[profile] (SDK; TSE: 4004) have agreed to establish a joint venture
for research of advanced carbon materials and their application to
energy devices. The new company, MEFS Co., Ltd. [profile], will focus
on R&D of carbon nanofiber in the category of "multi-walled carbon
nanotube" (MWCNT) that has great potential for wide-ranging
applications. Prof. Endo discovered carbon nanotube while he was a
researcher at the University of Orleans, France (in around 1975).
Since then, he has been engaged in the study of the basic science of a
wide variety of advanced carbon materials, including carbon fiber and
carbon cluster, as well as application of these materials to
high-performance batteries for portable electronic equipment and
electric vehicles, and power source systems.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1928
Applied Nanotech, Inc. Forms Team to Produce 25-Inch Diagonal Full
Color CNT TV
AUSTIN, Texas, Sept. 30 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Nano-Proprietary,
Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: NNPP) announced that its subsidiary Applied
Nanotech, Inc. [profile] (ANI) formed a team with prominent Japanese
display component manufacturers to produce a 25 inch diagonal full
color CNT TV prototype. The purpose of this effort is to demonstrate
that carbon nanotube (CNT) TVs in field emission mode have progressed
enough to enable high volume manufacturing.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1927
Elan's NanoSystems And Bristol-Myers Squibb Sign License Agreement For
NanoCrystal Technology
Provides Bristol-Myers Squibb with the Right to Develop and
Commercialize Products Incorporating this Technology
Elan Corporation, plc [profile] (NYSE:ELN) ("Elan") announced today
that its drug delivery business unit, NanoSystems, and Bristol-Myers
Squibb Company (NYSE: BMY) have signed a license agreement for
NanoCrystal(TM) technology. This license will provide Bristol-Myers
Squibb with access to NanoCrystal technology and the right to develop
and commercialize products incorporating this technology. The license
agreement between NanoSystems and Bristol-Myers Squibb includes
formulation services, technology transfer, development milestones and
royalties on sales of products incorporating or made using this
technology.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1926
CORPORATE AMERICA STILL BETTING ON BIG FUTURE FOR NANOTECH
The titans of corporate America and academia embraced nanotechnology
at one of the premier R&D conferences recently, even as they cautioned
that true nanoscale devices and widespread adoption are still years
away. The first real market applications still are expected to be
coatings and nanomaterials. Until scientists can perfect
nanomanufacturing true nanoscale devices and products are still
further in the future.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1925
VENTURE FIRMS STILL DON'T SEE THE NANOTECH IN BIOSCIENCES
Timing is everything, say Oregon's venture fund managers. The state of
nanotechnology in the biosciences is too early for venture capital
investing, believes Gerry Langeler, of Seattle-based OVP Venture
Partners, the oldest venture firm in the Pacific Northwest, currently
with $195 million to invest. Other experts in the region agree.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1924
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