![]() Scientists design simpler, more accurate nanothermometer July 26, 2006 | User rating: 4.3 / 5 after 39 vote(s)
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By using carbon nanotubes containing gallium for measuring temperature at the nanoscale, scientists have invented a new nanothermometer that works simply by heating and cooling the tubes. | |
![]() Quantum Dots May Lead to Rainbow Solar Cell March 07, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 112 vote(s)
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For the first time, researchers have created solar cells made of different-sized quantum dots, each tuned to a specific wavelength of light. By arranging these quantum dots in an ordered pattern, the scientists ... | |
![]() Simple Method Yields Complex Micro- and Nanoparticle Shapes July 26, 2007 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 27 vote(s)
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In applications from drug delivery to electronics, polymer particles several billionths to millionths of a meter in size could play key roles. But before many of these uses can be realized, scientists must ... | |
![]() Stretchable Silicon May Inspire a New Wave of Electronics June 13, 2007 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 67 vote(s)
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Scientists have created a form of nanoscale silicon that is stretchable. The new material may help pave the way for a class of stretchable electronic devices, such as “smart” surgical gloves and personal health ... | |
![]() Nanoscale 'Coaxial Cables' for Solar Energy Harvesting April 23, 2007 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 118 vote(s)
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Scientists have designed a new type of nanowire – a tiny coaxial cable – that could vastly improve a few key renewable energy technologies, particularly solar cells, and could even impact other cutting-edge, ... | |
![]() New Nanomaterial, 'NanoBuds,' Combines Fullerenes and Nanotubes March 30, 2007 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 64 vote(s)
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Researchers have created a hybrid carbon nanomaterial that merges single-walled carbon nanotubes and spherical carbon-atom cages called fullerenes. The new structures, dubbed NanoBuds because they resemble ... | |
Scientists Create First Non-Carbon Material with Near-Diamond Hardness March 28, 2007 | User rating: 4.5 / 5 after 76 vote(s)
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Research scientists have created the first non-carbon-based material with a hardness approaching that of diamond. Their work could have a significant impact on technologies and industries that rely on diamond as a cutting ... | |
![]() New graphene transistor promises life after death of silicon chip (Update) February 28, 2007 | User rating: 4.5 / 5 after 113 vote(s)
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Researchers have used the world's thinnest material to create the world's smallest transistor – a breakthrough that could spark the development of a new type of super-fast computer chip. | |
![]() Nature’s frugal glues provide insight for optimized adhesives January 11, 2007 | User rating: 4.2 / 5 after 41 vote(s)
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In trying to create a “glue” that would hold right up to the breaking point of the material being glued, scientists have found that such an ideal adhesive already exists—in bone, abalone shells, and spider ... | |
For Better Nanowires, Just Add Diamond November 15, 2006 | User rating: 4.2 / 5 after 432 vote(s)
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Among the positive characteristics of diamond, such as its beauty and unsurpassed hardness, are less well known properties that make it a valuable material in the electronics industry. Now, according to two scientists at ... | |
![]() Ancient Hair-Dyeing – A Nanoscience? October 30, 2006 | User rating: 3.6 / 5 after 31 vote(s)
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Scientists have discovered that an ancient method used to darken hair, dating back more than 4,000 years, is based on a chemical process that takes place at the nanoscale. This may be one of the earliest examples ... | |
![]() From Nanowires to Nanotubes September 28, 2006 | User rating: 4 / 5 after 22 vote(s)
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Hollow nanocrystals that can function as highly-efficient catalysers or transport containers for chemical agents are in great demand nowadays. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics ... | |
![]() Nanotube ink: Desktop printing of carbon nanotube patterns August 30, 2006 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 38 vote(s)
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Using an off-the-shelf inkjet printer, a team of scientists has developed a simple technique for printing patterns of carbon nanotubes on paper and plastic surfaces. The method, which is described in the August ... | |
![]() Nanoscience May Produce 'Perfect' Materials August 25, 2006 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 55 vote(s)
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Nanoscience may provide a way to engineer materials that are virtually defect-free – perfect, that is. | |
New method of growing carbon nanotubes to revolutionise electronics August 09, 2006 | User rating: 4.4 / 5 after 92 vote(s)
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A new method of growing carbon nanotubes is predicted to revolutionise the implementation of nanotechnology and the future of electronics. Researchers at the University of Cambridge have successfully grown nanotubes at a ... | |
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