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        Silica Coated Nano Titanium Dioxide as Sunscreen

        from the better-skin-through-nanotechnology dept.
        Marconi Lee writes "Chengyin Technology [in English] developed silica-coated titanium dioxide for sunscreen. Organic UV-absorbers have been used in sunscreen agents to protect against UVA. However, those organic UV-absorbers are only sparingly soluble in oil and form chelate compounds with metallic ions. It is therefore difficult to obtain a stable blend containing a large amount of those organic UV-absorbers, and this results in low protection factor of UVA (PFA)."

        European Computational HUB (PHANTOMS Network)

        from the computational-tools dept.
        Antonio Correia writes "PHANTOMS Computational Hub: a new tool for modelling and design of nanoscale electron devices. The main objective of the PHANTOMS network on Nanoelectronics (funded by the European Union under the IST programme) is to provide both researchers and industry access to the tools needed to create a multidisciplinary community and maintain them at the forefront of the nanoelectronics revolution. Information on this software hub initiative is available at the PHANTOMS website or by contacting Antonio Correia ([email protected]) / http://www.phantomshub.com / http://www.phantomsnet.com"

        Fluid Control Nanovalve Design

        from the molecular-machine-shop dept.
        santiago writes "Design of a Nanomechanical Fluid Control Valve Based on Functionalized Silicon Cantilevers: Coupling Molecular Mechanics and Classical Engineering Design

        Santiago Solares(*), Mario Blanco, and William A. Goddard III
        Materials and Process Simulation Center, California Institute of Technology,
        Mail Code 210-41, Pasadena, CA 91125
        (*) Author to whom correspondence should be addressed
        Full text available at: http://www.wag.caltech.edu/nanovalve"

        Swiss center for micro- and nanoscience

        from the new-incubators dept.
        Small Times reports the opening of a nanotechnology laboratory in a Swiss Institute that has an impressive track record in creating spinoff firms from its research: New Zurich Nanotech Lab Will Help Advance Industry.

        Nanotechnology yields energy-efficient lighting

        from the from-defects-to-NanoPockets dept.
        S. Hodgdon writes "Top technology story in today's Forbes.com: Kopin Shines Its Tiny Light. Here's a link to the press release: Kopin Harnesses Nanotechnology to Achieve Efficiency Breakthrough in Solid-State Lighting "

        Encyclopedia of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

        from the light-bedtime-reading dept.
        Dr. H. S. Nalwa writes "American Scientific Publishers is bringing the World first encyclopedia in the field of nanotechnology to be available in March 2003."
        ENCYCLOPEDIA OF NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY
        10-VOLUME SET (Available Both in Print and Online)
        ISBN: 1-58883-001-2, Library of Congress Catalog Number: 2002110511, Publication Date: March 2003, Pages: ca. 6000 pages

        Quantum Computing from Semiconductor Materials

        from the hope-for-qubits dept.
        waynerad writes "For the first time, University of Wisconsin-Madison scientists have designed a semiconductor-based device that can trap individual electrons and line them up, an advance that could bring quantum computing out of the gee-whiz world of scientific novelty and into the practical realm. Professors Mark Eriksson and Bob Joynt ( physics), Max Lagally (materials science and engineering), and Dan van der Weide (electrical and computer engineering) have developed a new type of "quantum dot" device for holding electrons that can be scaled up to build a working quantum computer. Made from tiny amounts of the same semiconductor materials used in today's computer chips, each quantum dot device contains just one infinitesimally small electron. When many of the devices are aligned, the electrons they house become usable quantum bits, or qubits, for computing."

        A preprint paper describing the technology: Design and proof of concept for silicon-based quantum dot quantum bits.

        Call for moratorium on commercial nanomaterials

        from the ban-it-first-ask-questions-later dept.
        In a lengthy position paper posted on their web site No Small Matter! Nanotech Particles Penetrate Living Cells and Accumulate in Animal Organs ETC Group, which describes itself as "dedicated to the conservation and sustainable advancement of cultural and ecological diversity and human rights," calls for "an immediate moratorium on commercial production of new nanomaterials [and for launching] a transparent global process for evaluating the socio-economic, health and environmental implications of the technology."

        Gold Nanoparticle gradient to aid catalyst, sensor research

        from the follow-your-affinities dept.
        Gina Miller writes "A July 18, 2002 Brookhaven National Laboratory press release reports that researchers at North Carolina State University have developed a material (which was then tested at Brookhaven) with gold nanoparticles deposited in a gradient of decreasing density along a silica surface. The decreasing gradient of particles was formed because the particles bound to organosilanes that had previously been emitted as a vapor and then deposited in a gradient of decreasing density on the surface according to increasing distance from the emitter. The press release has what appear to be AFM images of the decreasing density of gold nanoparticles."

        Dendrimers produce artificial antibodies

        from the molds-from-molecules dept.
        RobertBradbury writes "Science Daily provides a nice summary of work at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in which a team of chemists have developed a process using dendrimers to produce artificial antibodies."

        "Now if we can just get a design for a molecular sorting rotor to attach them to we would have one of the key components that one needs to build nanorobots like respirocytes."

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