Tuesday, October 25th, 2005

Anyone who has bought “white” LED devices knows that the light is not quite white. Michael Bowers, a graduate student at Vanderbilt University, has discovered an alternative method of producing white LEDs with a broad spectrum while remaining cool to the touch. This discovery will certainly make its way to architectural lighting and large scale applications as LED production costs drop. Bowers’ method also indicates possibilities to provide illumination through chemical processes in a luminescent paint to transform any surface into an light source.
via Exploration | Treehugger | Worldchanging
Posted in Fabrication Tech, Future, Lighting, Nanotech, Products, Sustainability | Discussion »
Sunday, October 23rd, 2005

The Florida Advanced Center for Composite Technologies (FAC2T) under the direction of Ben Wang, is working to develop real-world applications for Buckypaper, a material made of carbon nanotubes. The film holds potential for use in illuminating devices, heat sinks, armor, and electromagnetic protective skins. [press release]
via Physorg
Posted in Fabrication Tech, Materials, Nanotech, Technology | 1 Comment »
Monday, September 26th, 2005

Dr. Angela Belcher and her group at MIT are developing an organic-inorganic hybrid method of growing batteries. By forcing viruses to interact with materials like metals, Dr. Belcher is exploring new materials that are self assembling with a high degree of control based on the chosen DNA sequence. Imagine selecting DNA for any type of material you want the virus to grow. [Discover Article]
via Medgadget | ScienCentral
Posted in Biology, Biotech, Fabrication Tech, Future, Materials, Nanotech, Science | 3 Comments »
Monday, September 26th, 2005

Robert A. Freitas‘ dermal display concept functions as a medical nanorobot control center to keep one’s health in check. His book, Nanomedicine, Volume I: Basic Capabilities, is the first technical design study of nanotechnology in medicine and medical nanorobotics. Watch Gina Miller’s animation of the dermal display concept. [video (qt)]
via Medgadget
Posted in Biotech, Future, Health, Nanotech | Discussion »
Wednesday, September 7th, 2005

“Computing isn’t just confined to semiconductors. Molecules have been processing information ever since life has been around on our planet. Harnessing this remarkable ability really does have the potential to make a big difference to people’s lives.” For the first time, chemists at Queen’s University Belfast, with funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) have managed to manipulate molecules to perform logic operations based on the principles of photosynthesis.
via Physorg | BBC
read the rest of this entry
Posted in Biology, Computing, Future, Nanotech, Science, Technology | 12 Comments »
Sunday, September 4th, 2005

Researcher from the University of Texas, Dallas, and Australia’s CSIRO have a new dry-state method of self-assembling carbon nanotube ribbons at a whopping 7 meters per minute! (I’m sure in just a few years the exclamation point will look ridiculous.) [video]
via WorldChanging | EurekAlert
Posted in Fabrication Tech, Nanotech, Science | 4 Comments »
Tuesday, August 30th, 2005

With the help of nanotachonlogy, foggy windows, foggy goggles, and foggy glasses are about to meet the ultimate anti-fog treatment developed by a group of scientists at MIT. Soon, you’ll be telling your kids how, back in the day, you used to entertain yourself by writing profanities in foggy windows.
read the rest of this entry
Posted in Future, Materials, Nanotech, Products, Technology | 1 Comment »
Friday, July 15th, 2005

The long anticipated Nanofactory animation, titled “Productive Nanosystems: from Molecules to Superproducts” by Lizard Fire Studios with the support of Nanorex, is now version 1.0. [animation] [slide show]
Thanks, John!
Posted in Fabrication Tech, Future, Nanotech, Video | 5 Comments »
Tuesday, July 12th, 2005

NanoCAD takes a stab a modeling at the nanoscale through molecular mechanics.
1. Break open a Buckyball to create and discover something new.
2. Win a Nobel Prize.
Posted in Design, Nanotech, Programming | Discussion »
Monday, June 6th, 2005

Researchers at the National Institute for Nanotechnology (University of Alberta) have demonstrated for the first time that the charge of a single atom on a silicon surface can switch the conductivity of a nearby molecule. Robert Wolkow and his team’s demonstration bring nano electronics a leap forward into reality, as the technology moves hence forward with proof of a molecular transistor. [press release]
via Edmonton Journal
read the rest of this entry
Posted in Computing, Fabrication Tech, Future, Nanotech, News, Technology | Discussion »