Spiraling pine tree-like nanowires

Spiraling pine tree-like nanowires created by University of Wisconsin-Madison chemistry professor Song Jin and graduate student Matthew Bierman are evidence of an entirely different way of growing the tiny wires, one that could be harnessed to make better nanowires for applications such as high performance integrated circuits, LEDs and lasers, biosensors, and solar cells. The rapid elongation of the trunks is driven by a spiral defect within them called "screw dislocation," which causes them to twist as they grow and their branches to spiral. Photo by: courtesy Song Jin


Nanotech advance makes carbon nanotubes more useful

Apr 11, 2005

Researchers at UCSD have made carbon nanotubes bent in sharp predetermined angles, a technical advance that could lead to use ...


Customized Y-shaped carbon nanotubes can compute

Aug 15, 2005

Researchers at UCSD and Clemson University have discovered that specially synthesized carbon nanotube structures exhibit electronic properties that are improved over conventional transistors used in computers. ...


More Intense Heat Waves Could Slam California's Energy Grid

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Climate change and rolling blackouts may be a package deal. More frequent and intense heat waves expected in California over the next 100 years could overburden the state’s electric utility grid, according ...


Samsung Delivers Power-Saving Display Driver For Plasma Screens

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Samsung Electronics announced that its new, broad 256-channel display driver IC (DDI) for plasma display panels (PDP) is in mass production. This new DDI offers a lower power consumption rate over conventional ...


Widely used iron nanoparticles exhibit toxic effects on neuronal cells

Mar 28, 2007

Researchers at UC San Diego have discovered that iron-containing nanoparticles being tested for use in several biomedical applications can be toxic to nerve cells and interfere with the formation of their signal-transmitting ...


Nanogenerator provides continuous power by harvesting energy from the environment

Apr 05, 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 waves, ...


'Mighty mice' made mightier

Aug 29, 2007

The Johns Hopkins scientist who first showed that the absence of the protein myostatin leads to oversized muscles in mice and men has now found a second protein, follistatin, whose overproduction in mice lacking ...


Chemical compound found in tree bark stimulates growth, survival of brain cells

Oct 01, 2007

Researchers have identified a compound in tree bark that mimics the chemical reactions of a naturally occurring molecule in the brain responsible for stimulating neuronal cell signaling. Neuronal cell signaling plays a crucial ...