Nanofibers can also be loaded with proteins, nanotubes, fluorescent materials and therapeutic agents.""We can use almost any kind of polymer with this platform,
2015nanotubes/Buckyballs/Fullerenes Sandia researchers first to measure thermoelectric behavior by'Tinkertoy'materials May 20th, 2015cotton fibres instead of carbon nanotubes May 9th, 2015a better way to build DNA scaffolds:
2015'Microcombing'creates stronger, more conductive carbon nanotube films May 5th, 2015nanomedicine Effective Nano-Micelles Designed in Iran to Treat Cancer May 20th,
2015iranian Scientists Evaluate Dynamic Interaction between 2 Carbon nanotubes April 14th, 2015memory Technology Moving sector walls on the nano scale June 6th,
2015researchers grind nanotubes to get nanoribbons: Rice-led experiments demonstrate solid-state carbon nanotube'templates'June 15th, 2015materials/Metamaterials Designer electronics out of the printer:
Optimized printing process enables custom organic electronics June 16th, 2015pixelligent Closes $3. 4 Million in Funding: Capital Will be used to Support Partner & Customer Product Introductions and Increase Manufacturing Capacity June 16th, 2015solar cells in the roof and nanotechnology in the walls June 16th, 2015global Nanoclays Market Analysis
electrically conductive sheets of tiny carbon nanotubes to form a jellyroll-like sheath around a long rubber core.
senior author of the paper and director of the Alan G. Macdiarmid Nanotech Institute at UT Dallas. One key to the performance of the new conducting elastic fibers is the introduction of buckling into the carbon nanotube
the Robert A. Welch Distinguished Chair in Chemistry at UT Dallas."We make the inelastic carbon nanotube sheaths of our sheath-core fibers super stretchable by modulating large buckles with small buckles,
"This novel combination of buckling in two dimensions avoids misalignment of nanotube and rubber core directions, enabling the electrical resistance of the sheath-core fiber to be insensitive to stretch."
"By adding a thin overcoat of rubber to the sheath-core fibers and then another carbon nanotube sheath,
which the buckled nanotube sheaths serve as electrodes and the thin rubber layer is a dielectric, resulting in a fiber capacitor.
"The only exotic component is the carbon nanotube aerogel sheet used for the fiber sheath.""Last year, UT Dallas licensed to Lintec of America a process Baughman's team developed to transform carbon nanotubes into large-scale structures, such as sheets.
Lintec opened its Nanoscience & Technology Center in Richardson, Texas, less than 5 miles from the UT Dallas campus,
to manufacture carbon nanotube aerogel sheets for diverse applications.#####The Science research was supported by the Air force Office of Scientific research, the Robert A. Welch Foundation, the U s army, the National institutes of health, the National Science Foundation and the Office of Naval Research.
and multiwalled carbon nanotubes were used in its structure. Carbon nanotubes have unique properties and they have numerous applications in the production of nanocomposite membranes.
However, the heterogeneous distribution of nanoparticles in the structure of the membrane polymer can be considered as an important problem.
and aligned than carbon nanotubes, another material under investigation for membrane separation. Kumar and co-authors report their development in a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science."
and Patchable Strain Sensor for Humanmachine Interfaces Comprising a Nanohybrid of Carbon nanotubes and Conductive Elastomers"),could help robot developers make their machines more human.
The researchers created a stretchable and transparent sensor by layering a carbon nanotube film on two different kinds of electrically conductive elastomers.
The nanobatteries were fabricated by atomic layer deposition to make oxide nanotubes (for ion storage) inside metal nanotubes for electron transport, all inside each end of the nanopores.
using atomic layer deposition to carefully control thickness and length of multilayer concentric nanotubes as electrodes at each end.
#Researchers grind nanotubes to get nanoribbons (w/video) A simple way to turn carbon nanotubes into valuable graphene nanoribbons may be to grind them,
is to mix two types of chemically modified nanotubes. When they come into contact during grinding,
The research by Ajayan and his international collaborators appears in Nature Communications("Ambient solid-state mechano-chemical reactions between functionalized carbon nanotubes".
the new process is still a chemical reaction that depends on molecules purposely attached to the nanotubes, a process called functionalization.
If we can use nanotubes as templates, functionalize them and get reactions under the right conditions,
In their tests, the researchers prepared two batches of multi-walled carbon nanotubes, one with carboxyl groups and the other with hydroxyl groups attached.
triggering the nanotubes to unzip into nanoribbons, with water as a byproduct. hat serendipitous observation will lead to further systematic studies of nanotubes reactions in solid state,
including ab initio theoretical models and simulations, Ajayan said. his is exciting. The experiments were duplicated by participating labs at Rice
so the energy enough to break up the nanotubes into ribbons, but the details of the dynamics are difficult to monitor,
Kabbani said. here no way we can grind two nanotubes in a microscope and watch it happen.
and gather data about reactions that can be observed only as they are happening inside a battery("Probing Lithium Germanide Phase Evolution and Structural Change in a Germanium-in-Carbon nanotube Energy storage system").
several of which they also analyzed. hile the dipole moment is zero for flat graphene or cylindrical nanotubes,
Carbon nanotubes, seamless cylinders of graphene, do not display a total dipole moment, he said. While not zero, the vector-induced moments cancel each other out.
#Discovery of nanotubes offers new clues about cell-to-cell communication When it comes to communicating with each other,
Certain types of stem cells use microscopic, threadlike nanotubes to communicate with neighboring cells, like a landline phone connection, rather than sending a broadcast signal,
"The nanotubes had actually been hiding in plain sight. The investigation began when a postdoctoral researcher in Yamashita's lab,
Until the discovery of the nanotubes, scientists had been puzzled as to how cellular signals guiding identity could act on one of the cells
The researchers conducted experiments that showed disruption of nanotube formation compromised the ability of the germ line stem cells to renew themselves s
graphene, a conductive polymer and carbon nanotubes, which are atom-thick latticelike networks of carbon formed into cylinders.
and the carbon nanotubes carefully inserted between the graphene layers to form a self-assembled flat-packed,
The result was a 3d shape with, thanks to the carbon nanotubes, a massive surface area, excellent charge capacity that is also foldable.
and aligned than carbon nanotubes, another material under investigation for membrane separation. Kumar and co-authors report their development in a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science("Highly permeable artificial water channels that can self-assemble into two-dimensional arrays"."
The researchers were also able to insert carbon nanotubes into the dry object so that it could conduct electricity.
When they tested one conductive gel with the nanotubes and one without, they were able to create a 3d electrical circuit.
the team carefully engineered a 3d supercapacitor with carbon nanotube electrodes, and a hybrid battery. Both of them were fully functional even at 75 percent compression,
#Carbon nanotube finding could lead to flexible electronics with longer battery life Led by materials science Associate professor Michael Arnold
and Professor Padma Gopalan the team has reported the highest-performing carbon nanotube transistors ever demonstrated. In addition to paving the way for improved consumer electronics this technology could also have specific uses in industrial and military applications.
In a paper published recently in the journal ACS Nano Arnold Gopalan and their students reported transistors with an on-off ratio that's 1000 times better and a conductance that's 100 times better than previous state-of-the-art carbon nanotube transistors.
Carbon nanotubes are very strong and very flexible so they could also be used to make flexible displays
Carbon nanotubes are single atomic sheets of carbon rolled up into a tube. As some of the best electrical conductors ever discovered carbon nanotubes have long been recognized as a promising material for next-generation transistors
which are semiconductor devices that can act like an on-off switch for current or amplify current. This forms the foundation of an electronic device.
However researchers have struggled to isolate purely semiconducting carbon nanotubes which are crucial because metallic nanotube impurities act like copper wires and short the device.
Researchers have struggled also to control the placement and alignment of nanotubes. Until now these two challenges have limited the development of high-performance carbon nanotube transistors.
Building on more than two decades of carbon nanotube research in the field the UW-Madison team drew on cutting-edge technologies that use polymers to selectively sort out the semiconducting nanotubes achieving a solution of ultra-high-purity semiconducting carbon nanotubes.
Previous techniques to align the nanotubes resulted in less than-desirable packing density or how close the nanotubes are to one another
when they are assembled in a film. However the UW-Madison researchers pioneered a new technique called floating evaporative self-assembly or FESA
which they described earlier in 2014 in the ACS journal Langmuir. In that technique researchers exploited a self-assembly phenomenon triggered by rapidly evaporating a carbon nanotube solution.
The team's most recent advance also brings the field closer to realizing carbon nanotube transistors as a feasible replacement for silicon transistors in computer chips
and in high-frequency communication devices which are rapidly approaching their physical scaling and performance limits.
This is not an incremental improvement in performance Arnold says. With these results we've really made a leap in carbon nanotube transistors.
Our carbon nanotube transistors are an order of magnitude better in conductance than the best thin film transistor technologies currently being used commercially
while still switching on and off like a transistor is supposed to function. The researchers have patented their technology through the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
"Unlike other ultra strong materials such as carbon nanotubes, Kevlar is said an insulator Nicholas Kotov, the Joseph B. and Florence V. Cejka Professor of Engineering."
Unlike their predecessors, the team at IBS stayed away from things like carbon nanotubes and gold and looked at a more utilitarian option for their build material:
and aligned than carbon nanotubes, another material under investigation for membrane separation. Kumar and co-authors report their development in a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science."
#Carbon nanotube finding could lead to flexible electronics with longer battery life University of Wisconsin-Madison materials engineers have made a significant leap toward creating higher-performance electronics with improved battery life and the ability to flex
the team has reported the highest-performing carbon nanotube transistors ever demonstrated. In addition to paving the way for improved consumer electronics,
Gopalan and their students reported transistors with an on-off ratio that 1, 000 times better and a conductance that 100 times better than previous state-of-the-art carbon nanotube transistors. arbon nanotubes are very strong and very flexible,
Carbon nanotubes are single atomic sheets of carbon rolled up into a tube. As some of the best electrical conductors ever discovered
carbon nanotubes have long been recognized as a promising material for next-generation transistors, which are semiconductor devices that can act like an on-off switch for current
However, researchers have struggled to isolate purely semiconducting carbon nanotubes, which are crucial, because metallic nanotube impurities act like copper wires and hortthe device.
Researchers have struggled also to control the placement and alignment of nanotubes. Until now, these two challenges have limited the development of high-performance carbon nanotube transistors.
Building on more than two decades of carbon nanotube research in the field the UW-Madison team drew on cutting-edge technologies that use polymers to selectively sort out the semiconducting nanotubes,
achieving a solution of ultra-high-purity semiconducting carbon nanotubes. Previous techniques to align the nanotubes resulted in less than-desirable packing density,
or how close the nanotubes are to one another when they are assembled in a film. However, the UW-Madison researchers pioneered a new technique,
called floating evaporative self-assembly, or FESA, which they described earlier in 2014 in the ACS journal Langmuir.
In that technique, researchers exploited a self-assembly phenomenon triggered by rapidly evaporating a carbon nanotube solution.
The team most recent advance also brings the field closer to realizing carbon nanotube transistors as a feasible replacement for silicon transistors in computer chips and in high-frequency communication devices,
which are rapidly approaching their physical scaling and performance limits. he advance enables new types of electronics that aren possible with the more brittle materials manufacturers are currently using.
Michael Arnold his is not an incremental improvement in performance, Arnold says. ith these results,
wee really made a leap in carbon nanotube transistors. Our carbon nanotube transistors are an order of magnitude better in conductance than the best thin film transistor technologies currently being used commercially
while still switching on and off like a transistor is supposed to function. The researchers have patented their technology through the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
and have begun working with companies to accelerate the technology transfer to industry. The work was funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation,
or even to growing arrays of carbon nanotubes, which his group is also studying. his is high-quality research that represents significant progress on the path to scalable production methods for large-area graphene,
several of which they also analyzed. hile the dipole moment is zero for flat graphene or cylindrical nanotubes,
Carbon nanotubes, seamless cylinders of graphene, do not display a total dipole moment, he said. While not zero, the vector-induced moments cancel each other out.
#Crowd-sourced computing reveals how to make better water filters with nanotubes Crowd-sourced computing has helped an international research team including researchers from the University of Sydney discover a new method of improving water filtration systems and water quality.
Nanotube inflitration in actionthe team enlisted more than 150,000 computer volunteers worldwide to conduct the research.
which was able to simulate water flow in carbon nanotubes at very low speeds an activity that would normally require the equivalent of up to 40,000 years of processing power on a single computer.
simulations of water flow in carbon nanotubes could only be carried out under unrealistically high flow-rate conditions says the Director of CNMM, Quanshui Zheng. hanks to World Community Grid,
the Computing for Clean water project was able to expand these simulations to probe flow rates of just a few centimeters per second characteristic of the working conditions of real nanotube-based filters,
which will become essential to analyze the massive data generated by the volunteered computers. y simulating water molecules flowing through nanotubes we have shown how vibrations result in oscillating friction,
Ultimately this will help design new carbon nanotube based membranes for water filtration with reduced energy consumption. rowd-sourced computing power was essential to the success of our project.
Associate professor Shen explains the ongoing research. e plan to explicitly include the effects of defects in carbon nanotubes,
and to investigate other nanofluidic systems such as boron nitride nanotubes and biological channels. ource: University of Sydne a
electrically conductive sheets of tiny carbon nanotubes to form a jellyroll-like sheath around a long rubber core.
senior author of the paper and director of the Alan G. Macdiarmid Nanotech Institute at UT Dallas. One key to the performance of the new conducting elastic fibers is the introduction of buckling into the carbon nanotube
the Robert A. Welch Distinguished Chair in Chemistry at UT Dallas. e make the inelastic carbon nanotube sheaths of our sheath-core fibers super stretchable by modulating large buckles with small buckles,
Liu said. his novel combination of buckling in two dimensions avoids misalignment of nanotube and rubber core directions, enabling the electrical resistance of the sheath-core fiber to be insensitive to stretch.
By adding a thin overcoat of rubber to the sheath-core fibers and then another carbon nanotube sheath,
which the buckled nanotube sheaths serve as electrodes and the thin rubber layer is a dielectric,
she said. he only exotic component is the carbon nanotube aerogel sheet used for the fiber sheath.
Last year, UT Dallas licensed to Lintec of America a process Baughman team developed to transform carbon nanotubes into large-scale structures, such as sheets.
to manufacture carbon nanotube aerogel sheets for diverse applications c
#New receptor for controlling blood pressure discovered High blood pressure is a primary risk factor in the development of many cardiovascular diseases.
Now, researchers at Rice university in the US have found a new way of producing the material by grinding modified nanotubes with a mortar and pestle.
According to materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan this breakthrough reported in the current issue of Nature Communications-has been achieved by mixing two types of chemically modified nanotubes which,
The team claims that the new process could lead to significant advances in nanomaterials development. f we can use nanotubes as templates,
In their tests, the researchers prepared two batches of multi-walled carbon nanotubes, one with carboxyl groups and the other with hydroxyl groups attached.
triggering the nanotubes to unzip into nanoribbons, with water as a byproduct. The experiments were duplicated by participating labs at Rice, at the Indian Institute of technology and at the Lebanese American University in Beirut.
so the energy enough to break up the nanotubes into ribbons, but the details of the dynamics are difficult to monitor,
Beirut. here no way we can grind two nanotubes in a microscope and watch it happen.
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