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Results 11981 - 11990 of 12087 for Nanotechnology
  • News - 17 Apr 2007
    Chemists at UCLA have designed new organic structures for the storage of voluminous amounts of gases for use in alternative energy technologies. The research, to be published on April 13 in the...
  • Article - 15 Jan 2015
    A new nanoimprint lithography competence center called the NILPhotonics™ Competence Center has been established by EV Group (EVG), a key provider of wafer bonding and lithography systems for...
  • News - 10 Apr 2007
    Researchers have demonstrated a prototype nanometer-scale generator that produces continuous direct-current electricity by harvesting mechanical energy from such environmental sources as ultrasonic...
  • Article - 25 Nov 2014
    Bernd Runge, Vice President of OCSiAL, talks to AZonano about their single wall carbon nanotubes, called TUBALL™ and the benefits of their new partnership program.
  • News - 29 Mar 2007
    At the root of scientific study are observations made with the eyes; yet in nanoscience, our eyes fail us. The smallest object we can see still looms thousands of times larger than a typical...
  • News - 29 Mar 2007
    To the delight of researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, living cells gobbled up fluorine-laced nanoparticles without needing any coaxing. Then, because of the unusual...
  • News - 28 Mar 2007
    At the root of scientific study are observations made with the eyes; yet in nanoscience, our eyes fail us. The smallest object we can see still looms thousands of times larger than a typical...
  • Article - 2 Oct 2014
    The future of power may be on the nanoscale. Scientist around the world are currently trying to solve some of the major issues associated with todays technology. Advancements in solar cells, batteries...
  • Article - 28 Jul 2014
    Over the last several years scientists from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have been studying how to make nanomotors move around when suspended in a liquid. In 2012 a team...
  • News - 15 Mar 2007
    Electrons love to zip around metals such as copper, especially if the metal is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero. But if they encounter a magnetic atom (say, iron) during their travels, the...

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