Now a team of Northwestern University researchers has found a way to print three-dimensional structures with graphene nanoflakes.
Stoddart is the Board of trustees Professor of Chemistry in Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences."
Researchers at the University of Georgia have developed an inexpensive way to manufacture extraordinarily thin polymer strings commonly known as nanofibers.
study co-author and the Georgia Power Professor of Polymers, Fibers and Textiles in UGA's College of Family and Consumer Sciences."
"##The University of Georgia Research Foundation Inc. has filed a patent application on this new method.#####For more information, please click herecontacts:
'706-542-3122copyright University of Georgia Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
The work was done in collaboration with the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Hiroshima University,
and the Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute contributed to the study with colleagues from the University of Southern California and Arrogene Inc,
A team of scientists at Virginia Commonwealth University has synthesized a powerful new magnetic material that could reduce the dependence of the United states
"said Shiv Khanna, Ph d.,a commonwealth professor in the Department of physics in the College of Humanities and Sciences.
a former postdoctoral associate in the Department of chemistry in the College of Humanities and Sciences and a co-author of the paper.
A route to developing ultimate superconducting nanodevices A research group at Tohoku University has succeeded in fabricating an atomically thin,
The research team at Tohoku University turned its attention to iron selenide (Fese), which is a member of iron-based superconductors*2
and Fan Wu, both affiliated with PLA University of Science and Technology, worked with colleagues at Nanjing University of Science
Students and faculty at Vanderbilt University fabricated these tiny Archimedes'spirals and then used ultrafast lasers at Vanderbilt and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland,
The device would be capable of measuring the temperature of a cell's interior Researchers from the UAB and the University of Nottingham,
Scientists at Kiel University have successfully been able to transfer the experience from furnace to laboratory
scientists at Kiel University proved that this is not always necessary. They have successfully been able to transfer the experience from furnace to laboratory
says Dr Yogendra Kumar Mishra, group leader of the working group Functional Nanomaterials at Kiel University,
This work has been performed in co-operation with Professor Ion Tiginyanu and his team members from the Technical University of Moldova
Development of such 3d network materials from tin oxide, with geometry determining defects made by flame transport synthesis at Kiel University is a very interesting step forward into the future of nanostructure growth and applications."#
This is what Kiel University's research focus"Kiel Nano, Surface and Interface Science"(Kinsis) is busy investigating.
#Ultrafast heat conduction can manipulate nanoscale magnets Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have uncovered physical mechanisms allowing the manipulation of magnetic information with heat.
'858-534-7572copyright University of California-San Diegoissuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
Argonne researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities, and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific problems,
Argonne researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities, and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific problems,
ultrasensitive magnetoplasmonic sensors June 11th, 2015lehigh University researchers unveil engineering innovations at Techconnect 2015: Techconnect is the world's largest accelerator for industry-vetted emerging-technologies ready for commercialization June 11th, 2015synthesis of Special Nanoparticles in Iran to Increase MRI Contrast June 11th, 2015investigation of Optical
2015jpk reports the exploration of living cells using nanoscale and single molecule techniques through the application of scanning probe microscopy in the group of Yves Dufrne at the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium June 16th,
#New Sensors Measure Blood Anticoagulation Drug Iranian researchers from Isfahan University of Technology produced a highly sensitive and accurate sensor
Co-author Allen, a scientist with Melbourne University in Australia, who led the theoretical and modeling aspects of the new imaging technique,
"Says co-author Marks, a professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern University, "We are excited also quite by the possibilities of applying these to corrosion problems.
The University of California manages Berkeley Lab for the U s. Department of energy's Office of Science.
News and information On the Surface of Polymers June 17th, 2015deben reports on how the University of Portsmouth use in situ XCT compressive testing to help answer how materials respond to complex loading conditions June 17th,
2015imaging Deben reports on how the University of Portsmouth use in situ XCT compressive testing to help answer how materials respond to complex loading conditions June 17th,
2015materials/Metamaterials Deben reports on how the University of Portsmouth use in situ XCT compressive testing to help answer how materials respond to complex loading conditions June 17th,
2015deben reports on how the University of Portsmouth use in situ XCT compressive testing to help answer how materials respond to complex loading conditions June 17th,
The researchers, led by University of Illinois bioengineering professors Dipanjan Pan and Rohit Bhargava, report their findings in the journal Small."
'Copyright University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaignissuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
2015lehigh University researchers unveil engineering innovations at Techconnect 2015: Techconnect is the world's largest accelerator for industry-vetted emerging-technologies ready for commercialization June 11th, 2015synthesis of Special Nanoparticles in Iran to Increase MRI Contrast June 11th,
and colleagues from the University of Zürich and the University of Washington, have discovered two key strategies that enable Saharan silver ants to stay cool in one of the hottest terrestrial environments On earth.
professor at the Brain Research Institute, University of Zürich, Switzerland, and Gary Bernard, electrical engineering professor at the University of Washington, Seattle, who are renowned experts in the study of insect physiology and ecology.
The Columbia Engineering team designed and conducted all experimental work, including optical and infrared microscopy and spectroscopy experiments, thermodynamic experiments,
and the Air force Office of Scientific research (AFOSR) Multidisciplinary Research Program of the University Research Initiative (MURI) program (FA9550-14-1-0389.
and other complications, said team leader Richard Borgens, Purdue University's Mari Hulman George Professor of Applied Neuroscience and director of Purdue's Center for Paralysis Research."
and an endowment from Mrs. Mari Hulman George. Borgens has a dual appointment in Purdue's College of Engineering and the College of Veterinary medicine.##
The team, led by Dimitri Basov and Michael Fogler, professors of physics at the University of California,
"##Co-authors include researchers from MIT, TU Delft, Japan's National Institute for Materials science and Ludwig-Maximilians University.
'858-246-0161copyright University of California-San Diegoissuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
2015lancaster University revolutionary quantum technology research receives funding boost June 22nd, 2015graphene heat-transfer riddle unraveled June 17th,
2015research partnerships Lancaster University revolutionary quantum technology research receives funding boost June 22nd, 2015fabricating inexpensive, high-temp SQUIDS for future electronic devices June 22nd,
A team of Lehigh University engineers have demonstrated a bacterial method for the low-cost, environmentally friendly synthesis of aqueous soluble quantum dot (QD) nanocrystals at room temperature.
supplied by Lehigh's Faculty Innovation Grant (FIG) and Collaborative Research Opportunity Grant (CORE) programs.
and the Environment June 24th, 2015quantum Dots/Rods Iranian Researchers Model, Design Optical Switches June 13th, 2015lehigh University researchers unveil engineering innovations at Techconnect 2015:
#World#s 1st Full-Color, Flexible, Skin-Like Display Developed at UCF A breakthrough in a University of Central Florida lab has brought those scenarios closer to reality.
and the College of Optics and Photonics (CREOL) has developed a technique for creating the world first full-color,
Chanda research was funded by the university and grants from the Florida Space Institute/NASA. He was awarded just a $300,
Researchers from the University of Exeter have discovered an innovative new method to produce the wonder material Graphene significantly cheaper,
"Professor Seigo Tarucha from the University of Tokyo, coordinator of the Global Center of Excellence for Physics at Tokyo university and director of the Quantum Functional System Research Group at Riken Center
Professor Saverio Russo, co-author and also from the University of Exeter, added:""This breakthrough will nurture the birth of new generations of flexible electronics and offers exciting new opportunities for the realization of graphene-based disruptive technologies."
"In 2012 the teams of Prof Craciun and Profesor Russo, from the University of Exeter's Centre for Graphene science, discovered that sandwiched molecules of ferric chloride between two graphene layers make a whole new system that is the best known
About University of Exeter The University of Exeter is a Russell Group university that combines world-class research with very high levels of student satisfaction.
000 students and is ranked 7th in The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide league table, 10th in The Complete University Guide and 9th in the Guardian University Guide 2015.
In the 2014 Research Excellence Framework (REF), the University ranked 16th nationally, with 98%of its research rated as being of international quality.
Exeter was The Sunday Times University of the Year 2012-13. The University has invested strategically to deliver more than £350 million worth of new facilities across its campuses in the last few years;
including landmark new student services centres-the Forum in Exeter and The Exchange on the Penryn Campus in Cornwall, together with world-class new facilities for Biosciences, the Business school and the Environment and Sustainability Institute.
University of Tokyo researchers have developed a new ink that can be printed on textiles in a single step to form highly conductive and stretchable connections.
Now, Professor Takao Someya's research group at the University of Tokyo's Graduate school of Engineering has developed an elastic conducting ink that is easily printed on textiles and patterned in a single printing step.
and durability,"said study coauthor Ralph Nuzzo of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign."
but several different types of catalysts,"said coauthor and Yeshiva University scientist Anatoly Frenkel, who led the x-ray experiments."
and operates major scientific facilities available to university, industry and government researchers. Brookhaven is operated and managed for DOE's Office of Science by Brookhaven Science Associates,
a limited-liability company founded by the Research Foundation for the State university of New york on behalf of Stony Brook University, the largest academic user of Laboratory facilities,
Joint Research Centre-European commission (IT) European Research Services Gmbh (DE), Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc. U s.)Trinity college Dublin (IE) Stiftelsen SINTEF (NO) University of Liverpool
JILA is a partnership of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Colorado Boulder."
Janssen, who received his doctoral degree from Leiden University, is no stranger to the sensing of the very small.
which he received from the University of Nijmegen in The netherlands he did internships in the country and in France on detecting neurotransmitter secretion from single neurons.
and efficiency of prostate cancer diagnosis. Researchers at the University of Birmingham believe that the novel technology will help improve the process of early stage diagnosis. Glycoprotein molecules,
#UK study reveals new method to develop more efficient drugs A new study led by University of Kentucky researchers suggests a new approach to develop highly-potent drugs
Guo holds a joint appointment at the UK Markey Cancer Center and in the UK College of Pharmacy."
"said Tim Tracy, former Dean of the UK College of Pharmacy and current UK provost."
assistant professor in chemistry at the University of Chicago, have developed the first skeleton-like silicon spicules ever prepared via chemical processes."
and Northwestern University described their new method for the syntheses and fabrication of mesocopic three-dimensional semiconductors (intermediate between the nanometer and macroscopic scales)."
Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have developed a method for efficiently cooling electronics using graphene-based film.
professor at Chalmers University of Technology, were the first to show that graphene can have a cooling effect on silicon-based electronics.
"The research was conducted in collaboration with Shanghai University in China, Ecole Centrale Paris and EM2C CNRS in France,
###About Chalmers University of Technologychalmers University of Technology performs research and education in technology, science and architecture, with a sustainable future as overall vision.
Johan Liuprofessor of Bionano Systemschalmers University of Technologysweden+46 31 772 30 67+46 70 569 38 21, writeemail('chalmers. se','jliu';
2015renishaw adds Raman analysis to Scanning Electron microscopy at the University of Sydney, Australia July 9th, 2015thin films Graphene gets competition:
2015renishaw adds Raman analysis to Scanning Electron microscopy at the University of Sydney, Australia July 9th, 2015nanocomposites Improve Tire Properties July 9th,
Researchers from North carolina State university and Brown University have found that nanoscale wires (nanowires) made of common semiconductor materials have pronounced a anelasticity-meaning that the wires,
with a recovery time-scale in the order of minutes,"says Huajian Gao, a professor at Brown University and co-corresponding author of the paper.
Researchers from the EPA, University of Hull, Wageningen University and University college London participated in the study y
#Nanoscale light-emitting device has big profile University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers have created a nanoscale device that can emit light as powerfully as an object 10,000 times its size.
"said Cassandra Callmann, a graduate student in chemistry and biochemistry at the University of California, San diego,
Recently, researchers at Nanjing University in China created a material from polyethylene membranes that does exactly that.
Xiaojun Liu, a professor in the physics department at Nanjing University's Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures."
. a former member of Schneck's laboratory who is now an assistant professor at the Medical University of South carolina.
Under a licensing agreement between Neximmune and the Johns hopkins university, Jonathan Schneck and Mathias Oelke are entitled to a share of royalty received by the University on sales of products derived from this article.
Researchers from Polytechnique Montral and Imperial College London demonstrate the wavelike quantum behavior of a polariton condensate on a macroscopic scale and at room temperature July 14th, 2015nanospheres shield chemo drugs,
& Electron microscopy from their user groups at the Universities of Delft and Groningen July 14th, 2015global Sol-Gel Nanocoatings Industry 2015:
Researchers at Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) and FOM Foundation today present a very promising prototype of this in the journal Nature Communications.
Now researchers from Korea University in Seoul, have developed an easy and microelectronics-compatible method to grow graphene
"said Jihyun Kim, the team leader and a professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological engineering at Korea University."
#More efficient process to produce graphene developed by Ben-Gurion University researchers Abstract: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) and University of Western australia researchers have developed a new process to develop few-layer graphene for use in energy storage and other material applications that is faster,
potentially scalable and surmounts some of the current graphene production limitations. Graphene is a thin atomic layer of graphite (used in pencils) with numerous properties that could be valuable in a variety of applications,
H. T. Chua's group at the University of Western australia (UWA, Perth. Their ultra-bright lamp-ablation method surmounts the shortcomings
An international research team based at The University of Texas at Dallas has made electrically conducting fibers that can be stretched reversibly to over 14 times their initial length and
Researchers also contributed from universities in Florida, China and Brazil l
#Reshaping the solar spectrum to turn light to electricity: UC Riverside researchers find a way to use the infrared region of the sun's spectrum to make solar cells more efficient A huge gain in this direction has now been made by a team of chemists at the University of California,
Riverside that has found an ingenious way to make solar energy conversion more efficient. The researchers report in Nano Letters that by combining inorganic semiconductor nanocrystals with organic molecules, they have succeeded in"upconverting"photons in the visible and near-infrared regions of the solar spectrum."
e-newsletter from Toyohashi University of Technology: www. tut. ac. jp/english/newsletter/contents/2015/01/features/features. html TUT Research is an online quarterly magazine to introduce cutting-edge research in Toyohashi Tech.
and Columbia University team"Using a single symmetric molecule, an ionic solution and two gold electrodes of dramatically different exposed surface areas,
"says Jeff Neaton, Director of the Molecular Foundry, a senior faculty scientist with Berkeley Lab's Materials sciences Division and the Department of physics at the University of California Berkeley,
Neaton and his colleagues at Columbia University have discovered a way to address both deficiencies.""Electron flow at molecular length-scales is dominated by quantum tunneling,
"In collaboration with Columbia University's Latha Venkataraman and Luis Campos and their respective research groups, Neaton and Liu fabricated a high-performing rectifier from junctions made of symmetric molecules with molecular resonance
"The Berkeley Lab-Columbia University team believes their new approach to a single-molecule diode provides a general route for tuning nonlinear nanoscale-device phenomena that could be applied to systems beyond single-molecule junctions
Also participating were Aleksei Aksimentiev, associate professor of physics and Karl Decker, graduate student, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign;
Junli Hou and Wen Si, Fundan University, Shanghai, China; Thomas Walz, professor of cell biology and Rita de Zorzi, postdoctoral fellow, Harvard Medical school.
The National Science Foundation, the U s army Corps of Engineers, an Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Allocation and the Blue waters petascale supercomputer system at University of Illinois supported parts of this research h
#Computing at the speed of light University of Utah engineers have taken a step forward in creating the next generation of computers
A team of oncologists and engineers from the University of Michigan teamed up to help understand this crucial question.
"says study co-lead author Steven G. Allen, an M d.-Ph d. student in the University of Michigan Medical school's Medical scientist Training program.
"says study co-lead author Yu-Chih Chen, a postdoctoral researcher in Electrical engineering and Computer science at the University of Michigan College of Engineering.
"says co-senior study author Sofia D. Merajver, M d.,Ph d.,scientific director of the breast oncology program at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center.
and biology,"says study co-senior author Euisik Yoon, Ph d.,professor of electrical engineering and computer science and of biomedical engineering and director of the Lurie Nanofabrication Facility at the U-M College of Engineering."
Researchers from the University of Manchester, together with BGT Materials Limited, a graphene manufacturer in the United kingdom, have printed a radio frequency antenna using compressed graphene ink.
/University of Manchester) The study demonstrates that printable graphene is now ready for commercial use in low-cost radio frequency applications,
said Zhirun Hu, a researcher in the School of Electrical and Electronic engineering at the University of Manchester."
It will bring many new applications to our daily life very soon,"added Kostya S. Novoselov, from the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Manchester, who coordinated the project.
The University of Manchester research team together with BGT Materials Limited, found a way to increase the conductivity of graphene ink without resorting to a binder.
The University of Manchester and BGT Materials Limited team has plans to further develop graphene enabled RFID tags,
Now a team of Northwestern University researchers has found a way to print three-dimensional structures with graphene nanoflakes.
and their co-authors at IBM T. J. Watson Research center, Hong kong Polytechnic University, and the University of Minnesota.
Although the two materials are structurally similar both composed of hexagonal arrays of atoms that form two-dimensional sheets they each interact with light quite differently.
a researcher at IBM and the University of Minnesota, says, ur work paves the way for using 2-D material heterostructures for engineering new optical properties on demand.
Sheng Shen, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Carnegie mellon University who was involved not in this research, says, his work represents significant progress on understanding tunable interactions of light in graphene-hbn.
has been discovered by researchers at Temple University and the University of Maryland. The researchers, Harsh Deep Chopra, professor and chair of mechanical engineering at Temple,
who also runs the Materials Genomics and Quantum Devices Laboratories at Temple's College of Engineering.
Gail Bishop, a professor of microbiology at the University of Iowa Carver School of medicine and director of the schools Center for Immunology and Immune-Based Diseases, says that this paper presents a creative new approach with considerable
#Nanotechnology helps protect patients from bone infection Leading scientists at the University of Sheffield have discovered nanotechnology could hold the key to preventing deep bone infections,
led by the University of Sheffield School of Clinical Dentistry, showed applying small quantities of antibiotic to the surface of medical devices,
Professor of Biomaterials Sciences at the University of Sheffield, said: icroorganisms can attach themselves to implants
An international research team led by University at Buffalo engineers has developed nanotechnology that promises to make SERS simpler and more affordable.
and Zhejun Liu, Phd candidate, both at Fudan University in China. When a powerful laser interacts chemical and biological molecules,
#Powerful tool to control living cells at will by light A research group at the University of Tokyo has developed small photoswitching proteins that enable the highly accurate control of the activity of various intracellular molecules at will by irradiation with light.
in association with Montpellier Regional University Hospital and Stanford university, have transformed bacteria into"secret agents"that can give warning of a disease based solely on the presence of characteristic molecules in the urine or blood.
In this new work, the teams led by Jérôme Bonnet (CBS, Inserm U1054, CNRS UMR5048, Montpellier University), Franck Molina (Sysdiag, CNRS FRE 3690),
in association with Professor Eric Renard (Montpellier Regional University Hospital) and Drew Endy (Stanford university), applied this new technology to the detection of disease signals in clinical samples.
With this in mind, Jonesteam, together with industrial partners and other universities, has been developing low-cost pollution detectors that are small enough to fit in your pocket,
and they contain laser technology (developed by the University of Hertfordshire) to detect particulates from cars and lorries.
The current study uses technology Ott discovered as a research fellow at the University of Minnesota, in
Students and faculty at Vanderbilt University fabricated these tiny Archimedes spirals and then used ultrafast lasers at Vanderbilt and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Washington,
. who is also the Woodford L. and Ann A. Flowers University Professor at Harvard, and Robert Wood, Ph d.,who is also the Charles river Professor of Engineering and Applied sciences AT SEAS.
has been fabricated by Professor Ken-ichi SAITOW (Natural science Center for Basic Research and development, Hiroshima University), Graduate student Yunzi XIN (Graduate school of Science, Hiroshima University),
"Professor Ken-ichi Saitow, Natural science Center for Basic Research and development, Hiroshima University and Graduate student Yunzi Xin, Graduate school of Science, Hiroshima University, have fabricated an Si QD hybrid LED.
"Researchers from the UAB and the University of Nottingham, in an article published today in Physical Review Letters,
#Researchers build world's first fully functioning single crystal waveguide in glass Researchers from Lehigh University,
Lehigh University) The article's lead author, Adam Stone, received his Ph d. in materials science and engineering from Lehigh in 2014.
and researchers from Kyoto University in Japan and Polytechnique Montreal in Canada. The group says its achievement will boost ongoing efforts to develop photonic integrated circuits (PICS) that are smaller, cheaper, more energy-efficient and more reliable than current networks that use discrete optoelectronic components--waveguides, splitters, modulators, filters
"After conducting experiments at Lehigh and at Kyoto University and Polytechnique Montreal, the group built a single crystal in glass,
A study done at The University of Akron may be able to make this a reality in the near future.
and Ming Xiao, graduate student, recently published a paper in a joint project with the University of California,
and UV radiation (Nanowerk News) RMIT University researchers have created wearable sensor patches that detect harmful UV radiation and dangerous, toxic gases such as hydrogen and nitrogen dioxide (Small,"Stretchable
#3d printing of metal with microscale droplets A team of researchers from the University of Twente has found a way to 3d print structures of copper and gold,
Researchers from FOM and the University of Twente now made a major step towards high-resolution metal printing.
at the Indian Institute of technology and at the Lebanese American University in Beirut. They were performed in standard lab conditions as well as in a vacuum, outside in the open air and at variable humidity, temperatures, times and seasons.
and silicon as the sole light absorbers in artificial photosynthesis, said Boston College associate professor of chemistry Dunwei Wang,
a team of researchers led by Boston College chemist Dunwei Wang achieved'unassisted'water splitting using the abundant rust-like mineral and silicon to capture and store solar energy within hydrogen gas.
which included researchers from Boston College, UC Berkeley and China's University of Science and Technology, decided to focus on hematite's surface imperfections,
Co-author Allen, a scientist with Melbourne University in Australia, who led the theoretical and modeling aspects of the new imaging technique,
"Says co-author Marks, a professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern University, "We are excited also quite by the possibilities of applying these to corrosion problems.
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