Questioning why molecular manufacturing is dismissed

Dismissing Drexler Is Bad for Business, a Betterhumans column by Simon Smith: "Ignoring the potential of molecular manufacturing won't make it go away, so why is the US nanotech industry painting its advocates as kooks?"

Growing Silicon Nanowires Where You Want Them

Roland Piquepaille writes "Researchers from the Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) have found a way to grow silicon nanowires exactly where you need them. According to this news release, this will have an important impact on semiconductor research and might lead to faster computer chips. How does this new approach work? It's surprisingly easy. Raj Solanki and his team used a technique developed decades ago by Bell Labs called vapor-liquid-solid deposition. "The addition of the electrical fields is what's new," said Solanki. He hopes this discovery will lead to gigascale integration (a billion transistors on a chip). This overview gives you more details. It also includes a photo of such silicon nanowires."

Fabrication cost key to implementing nanotechnology

Nanotechnology: Replicating the Snowflake in the Fab, an article by Jeff Chappell in the Electronic News, reports the remarks of Thomas Theis, director of physical sciences for IBM research, in a keynote address at the SPIE Microlithography Conference, that containing the cost of fabrication may be the key to implementing nanotechnology in the information technology business.

Carbon nanofibre formation imaged

Vik Olliver writes "Chemical & Engineering News has a report complete with video footage showing carbon nanofibres being created by 10nm particles of nickel catalyst. The nickel is actually temporarily deformed during the process, and the imaging tool brings the precise control of carbon nanofibre -also presumably nanotubes – much closer."

MIT's Nanoruler Could Impact Chip Manufacturing

Roland Piquepaille writes "Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have devised the world?s most precise ruler, able to draw parallel lines separated by only a few hundred nanometers with a precision of under a nanometer. This has the potential to have a great influence on fields such as computer chips manufacturing as well as space physics. And, as says the MIT, this is a promising line of work. "The Nanoruler is 10 to 1,000 times faster and more precise than other methods for patterning parallel lines and spaces (known collectively as gratings) across large surfaces more than 12 inches in diameter. Such large surfaces are key to a number of applications involving gratings, such as larger wafers for the production of computer chips and higher-resolution space telescopes." This summary contains more details and references."

Improving Nanoscience writing

HLovy writes with news of a project at the University of South Carolina's center for societal and ethical implications of nanotechnology to explore how the ability of science writers to write about nanotechnology can be improved: Nanoscience writers as lab rats

Southern California NanoForumTM

NanoForum Event "Big Business: Bridging Commercial Applications in BIO-NANOTECHNOLOGY," February 26, 2004 4-9 p.m., UCSD CONNECT offices, 8950 Villa La Jolla Drive, Suite A214. Press Contact: Sandra Kay Helsel, Ph.D., ExperiencePR, LLC, 520-325-4636. Local Chapter Organizer: Petar Stojadinovic, 858-776-9352. Media Sponsor: http://www.biotechtoday.net

Mapping location of nanotechnology companies

Bmelki writes "Nanovip.com has established comparative statistics from the number of nanotechnology companies that we have in our database. The companies were sorted by country and American state, then put into graphics. At this stage, America is the leading country by far; California being the leading state with the most nanotechnology involved companies."

AFM Virus Detector

JohnFaith writes "This article on nanotechweb.org describes a new virus detector using an AFM."

Magazine soliciting nanotechnology articles

Paul C. Easton writes "Former Foresight Update editor Lew Phelps brings to our attention that The World & I magazine is soliciting articles about nanotechnology. Specific topics may include nanotechnology applications in materials design, electronics, robotics, health care, environment, energy conversion, transportation, and national security. Articles on the ethical and social implications of nanotechnology will also be considered."

0
    0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyReturn to Shop