Global News:
Russian
Nanotechnology Corp. to Sharply
Boost Spending
Outlook
for Nanotechnology in Japan
Iran
Forms Nanotechnology Applications
Committee in Construction ...
Australian water
innovation using nanotechnology
Nanotechnology research boosted by Japanese
link-up
US News:
Harvard
Extension School's new bioengineering and nanotechnologies
...
UNH
to help develop nanotechnology
with National Science … | Nano ...
Journal and Book:
Funding Opportunities:
Nano-Products:
Nanotechnology Now - News Story: "Nano
Toothpaste"
Nanocyl
Promote CNTs at Nano Korea 2009
EnerG2
Plant to Produce Nano-engineered
Carbon Electrodes
Southwest
Nanotechnologies Introduces More
Electrically Conductive ...
Nanotechnology-enabled consumer products
database grows to over 1000
Research News:
Graphene
nano wires 1000X better than
copper | Science Buzz
Electronics:
Responsible
Nanotechnology: Robots Do
Nanoscale Construction
IBM
using DNA, nanotechnology in
next-gen chips
Energy, Water & Environment:
Oil
patch inventor capitalizes on nanotechnology
SolarBotanic
Secures R & D Funding for Nano
Leaves Technology
Environmental
Effects of Nanotechnology and
Nanomaterials
Lower-Cost
Solar Cells to be Printed like Newspaper, Painted on ...
Nano-ink Could Reduce Cost, Expand
Application of Solar Energy
Smart Ways to Manage and
Re-Use Water using Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology: Lithium-Ion Batteries Have
Better Performance With ...
Materials & Manufacturing:
Nanotechnology - Opportunities for Nanotechnology in the Aerospace ...
NanoMedicine & Health:
BioAlliance
Pharma to present at the French-Norwegian ...
Tumors
Feel the Deadly Sting of Nanobees
Nanotechnology-based gene therapy technique
could fight late-stage ...
Fusion
of Nano-Circuits, Bio-membranes
Creates New Hybrid Technology
Link
Between Nanotechnology and
Alzheimer's Disease
'Electronic
Nose' Could Spot Kidney Disease
New
DNA test uses nanotechnology to
find early signs of cancer
Nanotechnology fabrication technologies can
be advanced by ...
Nano-bio Material Kills Cancer Cells,
Leaves Healthy Cells In ...
Business:
Nano-imprint litho system maker Obducat
wins first order from Russia
Nano
Tech Stocks: Nanotech Europe 2009
Nanotechnology: Innovation vs. Corporate
Welfare
Founder of Shrink
Nanotechnologies Named as One of the Top 35 ...
Articles & Reports:
India
2009: Nanotechnology PPT
Nano-Risks & Safety:
Debate
over safety of nano in sunscreens
still simmers as summer ...
New
Safety Directions for Nanotechnology
SciScoop Science News
A
Safe Approach To Nanotechnology ~
Tech News Watch
A
nano janitor for toxic waste
Jobs:
Education & Outreach:
Ten
Things You Should Know about Nanotechnology
|
|
Nano.Cancer.Gov News - August 2009 |
|
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
Tumors Feel the Deadly Sting of Nanobees New Cancer Drug Delivery System Is Effective and Reversible Nanoparticles Detect and Profile Cancer Cells Rapidly Nanoparticle-Based Gene Therapy Technique Could Fight Late-Stage Tumors Nanotubes Destroy Kidney Tumors Nanoflares Light Up Molecules in Live Cells Nanotags Pinpoint Multiple Cancer Markers in Live Animals Nanoparticles Cross Blood-Brain Barrier To Enable "Brain Tumor
Painting” |
|
SOURCE: NanoNews-Now Digest
Summary
of Finnish High-Tech Company Capital Raising Activity - H109
Technopolis Ventures Ltd. August 22nd,
2009 Technopolis Online Reports: Finnish high-tech growth
companies raised almost €51 million in the first half of 2009—a 17%
decrease from the first half of 2008. In addition, Q2 2009 decreased more than
50% compared to the prior year.
Nanocatalysts
Find Application in Eliminating Air Pollution
Fars News Agency August 23rd, 2009 A
research team at the chemical process technology laboratory of
Using
carbon nanotubes to detect nitric oxide: New sensor could reveal nitric oxide's
role in living cells
MIT August 23rd, 2009 Source:
"The rational design of nitric oxide selectivity in single-walled carbon
nanotube near infrared fluorescence sensors for biological detection"
Jong-Ho Kim et al Nature Chemistry
Contact
lens with integrated inorganic semiconductor device
EPA
awards UH lead role to study toxin effects on embryonic development: $3.2M
grant to explore how chemicals affect human health, which ones may cause
serious diseases
Lower-Cost
Solar Cells to Be Printed Like Newspaper, Painted on Rooftops
Printing
silicon in South Africa - Part one
printedelectronicsworld.com August
24th, 2009 The engine of the new printed electronics will be
printed transistors on flexible substrates that can be one tenth to one
hundredth of the cost of those in simple silicon chips. Most of the work has
been directed towards organic transistors because they are easy to print and
some believe that they are a good route to ambipolar transistors (p and n type
in one device) and light emitting transistors. However, tussling for the low
cost slot - the main market need - we now have a rapidly increasing numbers of
research centers working on inorganic printed transistors, both printed silicon
and printed metal oxides, particularly based on zinc oxide semiconductors.
These exhibit greater charge mobility in the semiconductor and therefore higher
frequency of operation opening up larger potential markets. Some say they also
offer lower material costs, particularly if low temperature processes can be
employed. Printed silicon nanoparticles have received the least attention
because the inks are very difficult to make and often high temperature
annealing is needed after the deposition. In the
UCSB
Scientists Discover Potential Drug Delivery System
UCSB August 24th, 2009 Scientists
at UC Santa Barbara have discovered a potential new drug delivery system. The
finding is a biological mechanism for delivery of nanoparticles into tissue.
The results are published in this week's Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
Nanotech-enabled
Consumer Products Top the 1,000 Mark: Public Inventory Continues to Grow
Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies
August 24th, 2009 Nanotech consumer products have now
crossed the millennial threshold. Over 1,000 nanotechnology-enabled products
have been made available to consumers around the world, according to the
Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies (PEN). The most recent update to the
group's three-and-a-half-year-old inventory reflects the increasing use of the
tiny particles in everything from conventional products like non-stick cookware
and lighter, stronger tennis racquets, to more unique items such as wearable
sensors that monitor posture.
New
material for nanoscale-computer chips
laengsynt.de August 25th, 2009 Nanochemists
from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Nano-Science Center, Department of
Chemistry at University of Copenhagen have developed nanoscale electric
contacts out of organic and inorganic nanowires. In the contact they have
crossed the wires like Mikado sticks and coupled several contacts together in
an electric circuit. In this way they have produced prototype computer
electronics on the nanoscale.
53
MW Thin-Film Solar Power Plant Now Germany's Largest
treehugger.com August 25th, 2009 The
Lieberose solar park is currently under construction and scheduled to be
completed by the end of the year. Developed by juwi Group and First Solar, it
will occupy 162 hectares on a former Soviet army site and will consist of some
700,000 thin-film solar modules.
Argonne
scientist named one of the world's top innovators
Argonne National Laboratory August
25th, 2009 Elena Shevchenko, nanoscientist at the U.S.
Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory, has joined a select
list of the world's youngest top innovators chosen by Technology Review
magazine for her work at Argonne's Center for Nanoscale Materials.
SCHEV
approves VCU Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Program
National
Science Foundation funds nanoscale research
Northeastern University August 25th,
2009 Northeastern University's Nanoscale Science and
Engineering Research Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing (CHN) has received
a $12.25 million renewal grant from the National Science Foundation to continue
its industry-leading research: translating nanoscale scientific processes into
commercially viable technologies.
10
times bigger: Toshiba and Hitachi shake hands to bring us next-gen HDDs
crunchgear.com August 25th, 2009 Nanotechnology
will be used to boost recording density, leading to smaller HDDs for the end
consumer and energy consumption cuts of more than 20% for data centers. In the
end, recording density should be as high as 5 terabits (5 trillion bits) per
square inch, ten times more than now.
FEI
and Tsinghua University Announce Cryo-TEM Installation
FEI August 25th, 2009 Tsinghua
University Selects FEI's Titan Krios Cryo-Electron Microscope Investment in
Titan Krios underscores Tsinghua University's commitment to leadership in
structural biology.
Deaths
Shake Nanotechnology Community
The Promise of Tomorrow August 25th,
2009 " … could easily have been prevented,"
Director of International Council on Nanotechnology says on science news radio
program.
Innovating
for survival
dailynews.lk August 25th, 2009 While
freedom of choice and the power of advertising in sustaining media houses is a
given in the dominant cultural belief system , we may need to reinvent and
rediscover ways in which we can present and promote what is useful and most
needed to sustain lives at levels that will not be threatening to the good
health of Mother Earth. Info-communications, nanotechnology and other
innovations can serve humankind well, to seek effective means of further
conserving our resources within this proposed framework of taking on
sustainable lifestyles.
Quantum
dots spot epigenetic markers for early cancer detection
Nanotubes
help to solve desalination problem
LEGOs
Help Researchers Learn What Happens Inside Lab-on-a-Chip Devices
Johns Hopkins University August 26th,
2009 Johns Hopkins engineers are using a popular children's
toy to help them visualize the behavior of particles, cells and molecules in
environments too small to see with the naked eye. These researchers are
arranging little LEGO pieces shaped like pegs.
New
ultrasensitive electronic sensor array speeds up DNA detection
Novel
Technique Enables Rapid Size Determination of Quantum Dots and Nanoparticles
Paraytec Ltd August 26th, 2009 Novel
Technique Enables Rapid Size Determination of Quantum Dots and Nanoparticles
Bharatbook.com
: Medical Nanotechnology Markets
Bharatbook.com August 26th, 2009 Bharatbook.com
pleased to announce a new report on "Medical Nanotechnology Markets"
provides in-depth analysis on Business Strategies for Medical Nanotechnology.
Iran
Forms Nanotechnology Applications Committee in Construction Industry
farsnews.com August 26th, 2009
Rajiv
Gandhi Education City to come up at Haryana
ptinews.com August 26th, 2009 The
City will cater to the requirements of students from within the state and other
parts of the country and overseas in the fields of nanotechnology, genetics,
biotechnology, engineering, technology and medicines, the release said.
Modi
inaugurates Forensic Science University in Gandhinagar
topnews.in August 26th, 2009 The
Directorate of Forensic Science Laboratory has added another feather to its cap
by commencing the formal inauguration of the Gujarat Forensic Science
University (GFSU) at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad (IIMA) on
Tuesday. The university offers three new courses. These are: Forensic
nanotechnology, Investigative psychology and Forensic nursing.
Canada
needs new paradigm for research and innovation
thestar.com August 26th, 2009 Biotechnology
and other emerging technologies (e.g. nanotechnology) as yet make no meaningful
contribution to GDP and for various reasons, such as the lack of domestic
multinational pharmaceutical companies, will not do so for decades to come.
IBN’s
New Ultrasensitive Electronic Sensor Array Speeds Up DNA Detection:
Cost-effective technology has impact on disease diagnosis and biological
research
Institute of Bioengineering and
Nanotechnology August 26th, 2009 Scientists at Singapore's
Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (IBN), the world's first
bioengineering and nanotechnology research institute, have successfully
developed a novel electronic sensor array for more rapid, accurate and
cost-efficient testing of DNA for disease diagnosis and biological research.
This study was published recently in a leading international chemistry journal,
Journal of the American Chemical Society 1.
High-Efficiency
Solid-State Lighting and Superconductor Research Receives Funding: Energy
sciences flourish under DOE grant award
Los Alamos National Laboratory August
26th, 2009 Lower-cost, higher-efficiency lighting and better
superconducting materials could result from a pair of grants awarded to Los
Alamos National Laboratory researchers.
Top
Speakers at Europe’s Largest Annual Nanotechnology Conference: Nanotech
Europe 2009
Spinverse August 27th, 2009 Europe's
largest annual nanotechnology conference and exhibition, Nanotech Europe takes
place in Berlin, Germany's capital city at the heart of Europe. In its fifth
year, Nanotech Europe will be held on 28 - 30 September 2009.
Automated
Particle Analysis for ZEISS Scanning Electron Microscopes
Carl Zeiss August 27th, 2009 This
software package enables highly automated detection, investigation and analysis
of samples
LIBRA
200 CS-TEM/STEM from Carl Zeiss
Carl Zeiss August 27th, 2009 A
corrected view of the sub-Angstrom world
Hankering
for Molecular Electronics? Grab the New NIST Sandwich
NIST August 27th, 2009 The
sandwich recipe recently concocted by scientists working at the National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) may prove tasty for computer chip
designers, who have long had an appetite for molecule-sized electronic
components - but no clear way to satisfy it until now.
Scientists
find evidence of iridescence in 40 million-year-old feather fossil
Superconductivity
'fingerprint' found at higher temperatures
Cornell University August 27th, 2009 New
measurements at Cornell have shown that "high-temperature"
superconductors may have the potential to go even higher, offering the
possibility of creating room-temperature superconductors, or at least
superconductors that will work with conventional refrigeration.
Is
quantum mechanics messing with your memory?
guardian.co.uk August 27th, 2009 Imagine
if a cold cup of coffee spontaneously heated up as you watched. Or a cracked
pane of glass suddenly un-broke. According to physicist Lorenzo Maccone at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, you see things like this all the time -
you just don't remember. In a paper published last week in Physical Review
Letters, he attempts to provide a solution to what has been called the mystery
of "the arrow-of-time". Briefly, the problem is that while our laws
of physics are all symmetrical or "time-reversal invariant" - they
apply equally well if time runs forwards or backwards - most of the everyday
phenomena we observe, like the cooling of hot coffee, are not. They never seem
to happen in reverse.
Baoding
Tianwei Starts Mass Production of Thin Film Solar Panels with Oerlikon Solar
Technology
Oerlikon Solar August 27th, 2009 One
of the largest Thin Film Solar Fabs in Mainland China Ramps up in Record Time
UI
team improves delivery of cancer-fighting molecules
EuroNanoMedicine
2009
CORDIS August 27th, 2009 Nanomedicine
offers new opportunities in modern medicine: EuroNanoMedicine 2009, September
28-30
Folded
nanoboxes could open door to nano-circuits
newscientist.com August 27th, 2009 Do
you remember as a child producing paper cubes by folding up a flat cross shape?
Now two researchers have applied the same technique to the nanoscale, in the
process creating the first nanoparticles with precisely patterned surfaces.
These patterns could form the basis of electronic nano-circuits or provide
docking stations on targeted drug-delivery particles. "At the macroscale,
everything can easily be patterned in three dimensions," lead researcher
David Gracias at Johns Hopkins University (JHU) in
Hectic
start for French university foundations
sciencebusiness.net August 27th, 2009 Half
of
NZ
researcher's precious metal breakthrough offers cleaner air
3news.co.nz August 27th, 2009 Wellington
university student John Watt was tonight named the 2009 MacDiarmid Young
Scientist of the Year for finding a cheap and effective way of removing toxic
pollutants from vehicle exhausts. Mr Watt's breakthrough research involves
"growing" nanoparticles of a precious metal, palladium, that costs up
to $11,000 a kg, to efficiently remove the toxic gases. In
Argonne
receives $29 million in additional Recovery Act funds for major facilities upgrades,
research
Argonne National Laboratory August
28th, 2009 The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne
National Laboratory has received an additional $29.1 million in DOE Office of
Science (SC) funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act for a
range of improvements and upgrades to major scientific facilities and other
projects.
Picosun
fiscal Q1 sales break previous company records
Picosun Oy August 28th, 2009 Picosun
Oy, Finland-based global manufacturer of state-of-the-art Atomic Layer
Deposition (ALD) systems report new sales revenue records for its fiscal Q1
(May to July). When compared to 2008, despite the crash of the global economy,
Picosun's year-on-year sales for its fiscal Q1 rose by more than a third.
Self-Destructing
Messages
Angewandte Chemie International Edition
August 28th, 2009 Light-reactive coatings make metal
nanoparticles into inks for self-erasing paper
IBM
Scientists First to Image the 'Anatomy' of a Molecule
IBM August 28th, 2009 Imaging
individual atoms within a molecule has been a long-standing goal of surface
microscopy
IRAN:
20-year plan for knowledge-based economy
universityworldnews.com August 28th,
2009 Under the plan, industry-university research
partnerships to convert ideas into new commercial processes, products and
technologies will be promoted. Research and science education will focus on
achieving high-level innovation in areas such as nanotechnology, information
technology, biotechnology, aerospace, energy, environment, health, water
management and national transportation.
AFRICA:
Plan for 15 NextEinstein institutes
universityworldnews.com August 28th,
2009 The innovative NextEinstein Initiative providing
postgraduate training in mathematics and computing skills to super-bright
African graduates is spreading its wings. The first African Institute for
Mathematical Sciences in
Nanotech
will make furnaces cheaper, greener: developer
edmontonjournal.com August 28th, 2009 Steve
Petrone works with particles less than a thousandth of a millimetre in diameter
to make giant petrochemical furnaces more efficient. The revolutionary
nanotechnology-based coatings created at Quantiam Technologies can
significantly reduce energy and maintenance costs at plants producing
olefins--the largest group of worldwide petrochemicals. And the bonus is that
this also reduces greenhouse gas emissions. After eight years and $17 million
taking it from the lab through pilot projects at plants such as Nova Chemicals'
Joffre operation, Quantiam is ready to build a$9.2-million, 35,000-square-foot
manufacturing plant in
Government
of Canada recognizes Quantiam Technologies Inc. as a Canadian Innovation Leader
Quantiam Technologies August 28th, 2009 The
Honourable Rona Ambrose, Minister of Labour, on behalf of the Honourable Gary
Goodyear, Minister of State (Science and Technology), today recognized
Edmonton-based Quantiam Technologies Inc. as a Canadian Innovation Leader, for
linking scientific research to commercialization, jobs and economic growth.
SOURCE: NANOTECHWEB.ORG NEWSWIRE
TECHNOLOGY UPDATE
Light magnetizes nanoscale
semiconductors Result could be important for spintronics applications
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40162
Angular approach produces excellent
photonic crystals
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40157
Making graphene in a flash
A common camera flashbulb can turn
graphite oxide into graphene
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40144
Surface rubbing converts carbon
layers into nanostructures Triboprobe-equipped TEM captures friction and
fatigue at work in real-time
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40137
Friction keeps molecular motors on
track Biophysicists gain a better understanding of motion in living cells
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/40119
BUYERS GUIDE SPOTLIGHT - Gas and
flow sensing
Sponsored by Raith GmbH
Raith is an independent high
technology enterprise
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/company/B500012544
Info category
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/companies/category/695
Next week's topic - Optical
Microscopy
To sponsor a category, email
david.iddon@...
LAB TALK
Rare earth oxide nanotubes made in
minutes Rapid hydrothermal synthesis of rare earth oxide activated Y(OH)3 and
Y2O3 nanotubes
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40158
Nanocomposite route to
ultra-sensitive SERS substrates Unique morphology of polymer-metal
nanocomposite structures produces desirable hot spots
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40152
QD array described by collective
transport model
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40146
Nanoindentation study points towards
metastable silicon phases MD and SSRM results support the onset and evolution
of metastable phases
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40145
Doped nanotubes present excellent
bioactivity Stem cells attached to niobium-doped titania nanotubes
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/lab/40118
The 2008 ISI impact factor for
Nanotechnology has risen to 3.446 http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/Nano
MOST-ACCESSED NANOTECHNOLOGY
ARTICLES
Free-to-read showcase of the
journal's most-accessed papers.
http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/-page=extra.accessed/0957-4484
NANOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL COVER GALLERY
http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/-page=extra.covers/0957-4484
Nanotechnology is published weekly
and features special subject sections.
Please send us your paper by going
to http://www.iop.org/journals/authorsubs
or by visiting the journal homepage http://www.iop.org/journals/nano
and take advantage of some of the fastest publication times around!
Don't forget that all papers are
free online for 30 days after they are published. This means that anyone in the
world can read your paper as long as they have access to the web!
CORPORATE PARTNERS
Lake Shore Cryotronics, Inc.
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/company/B500014311
WHITE PAPERS
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/channel/whitepapers
ONLINE BUYERS GUIDE
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/buyers-guide
To find out more about advertising
on nanotechweb.org, do get in touch with me - David Iddon
david.iddon@...
Tel +44 (0)117 930 1032
STAR PRODUCTS
Ultra-Thin Porous and Non-Porous
Silicon TEM Windows TEMwindows.com Pure Silicon UltraSM® TEM Windows are
available as Porous Si Windows with 10-50 nm pores or as ultra-thin Non-Porous
Si Windows with thicknesses of
5-15 nm.
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/product/P000012392
SOURCE: New RFPs From NineSigma
|
NineSigma Weekly Update for August 26, 2009 |
|