Nano Shake-Up: Routine Handling Can Affect Nano Drug Carriers

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Newswise Significant advances have been made in chemotherapy over the past decade, but targeting drugs to cancer cells while avoiding healthy tissues continues to be a major challenge.

Nanotechnology has unlocked new pathways for targeted drug delivery, including the use of nanocarriers, or capsules, that can transport cargoes of small-molecule therapeutics to specific locations in the body.

The catch? These carriers are tiny, and it matters just how tiny they are. Change the size from 10 nanometers to 100 nanometers, and the drugs can end up in the wrong cells or organs and thereby damage healthy tissues.

A common assumption is that once a nanocarrier is created, it maintains its size and shape on the shelf as well as in the body.

However, recent work by a group of researchers led by Thomas H. Epps, III, and Millicent Sullivan in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Delaware has shown that routine procedures in handling and processing nanocarrier solutions can have a significant influence on the size and shape of these miniscule structures.

Their findings are reported in a paper, Size Evolution of Highly Amphiphilic Macromolecular Solution Assemblies Via a Distinct Bimodal Pathway, published in Nature Communications on April 7.

Sullivan explains that chemotherapeutic agents are designed to affect processes related to cell division. Therefore, they not only kill cancer cells but also are toxic to other rapidly proliferating cells such as those in hair follicles and bone marrow. Side effects can range from hair loss to compromised immune systems.

Our goal is to deliver drugs more selectively and specifically to cancer cells, Sullivan says. We want to sequester the drug so that we can control when and where it has an impact.

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Nano Shake-Up: Routine Handling Can Affect Nano Drug Carriers

Imagine Nation Museum to celebrate NanoDays Tuesday

Sunday, April 13, 2014 1:05 AM EDT

SPECIAL TO THE PRESS

BRISTOL Imagine Nation Museum is celebrating NanoDays April 15 as part of a nationwide festival of educational programs about nanoscale science and engineering.

The festivities will take place from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the museum at One Pleasant St.

The event is the largest public outreach effort in nanoscale science education and involves science museums, research centers and universities from Puerto Rico to Alaska.

NanoDays programs demonstrate the special and unexpected properties found at the nanoscale, examines tools used by nanoscientists, showcases nano materials with spectacular promise and invites discussion of technology and society.

Visitors will explore capillary action and non-Newtonian fluids, investigate new nano products and materials, and imagine what society might be like if we all wore invisibility cloaks! Other activities include using electricity to make a nickel coin look like a penny, and a program about Robots & People.

All programs are included with museum admission of $7 person. Children under 1 years-old and Imagine Nation Museum members get in free.

For more information, call the museum at (860)314-1400 or visit imaginemuseum.org.

Our valued readers, As you see we're now requiring anyone wishing to post a comment to register first. That registration includes first and last name, user name, and e-mail address. We will not send advertising or any other unsolicited material. We're simply working to curtail the number of comments that a reasonable person would find offensive or objectionable, such as ones containing profanity or threatening language. Please use our forum as an opportunity for spirited debate - just be civil and observe the golden rule.

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Imagine Nation Museum to celebrate NanoDays Tuesday

Gutka ban cuts excise revenue of Ahmedabad zone

AHMEDABAD: Ban on Gutka in September 2012 and shifting of Tata Nano's excise account being an LTU (Large Taxpayer Unit) to Mumbai has resulted in shortfall of approximately Rs 500 crore in excise duty for Excise II commissionerate of Ahmedabad zone in the last two years.

After the Gutka ban in 2012-13, Excise II was forced to halve its targets of revenue in 2013-14. In 2013-14, Excise II collected excise duty worth Rs 793 crore against the target of Rs 776 crore. Though the department surpassed the target last year, it was Rs 136 crore less than the collections in 2012-13. Against the target of Rs 1,315 crore, Excise II collected Rs 929 crore in 2012-13, falling way behind target due to Gutka ban. Excise II majorly covers Narol, Naroda, Sanand and Changodar areas.

"Gutka industries used to contribute around Rs 400 crore every year, but after the ban collections fell badly. Also, from June 2013 Tata Nano has begun paying excise duty in Mumbai zone which too has left the collections dry," said a senior excise official.

Tata Nano in 2012-13 paid excise duty worth Rs 107 crore for its facilities in Sanand. "There were talks of manufacturing some other models of Tata motors at the Sanand plant, but that too fizzled out," added the official.

In 2013-14, Excise II commissionerate registered 27 cases of duty evasion worth Rs 100 crore. In on-the-spot recovery, excise officials recovered Rs 12.34 crore and in the raids conducted during the year seizures worth Rs 28 crore were made. Of all the evaders, machinery industries, fertilizer makers and engineering goods manufacturer were the major excise duty evaders, according to Excise II commissioner.

Directorate General of Central Excise Intelligence, Ahmedabad zonal unit detected evasion of central excise duty to the tune of Rs 730 crore in financial year 2013-14, up by Rs 70 crore from 2012-13. According to sources, urea and fertilizer manufacturers evaded excise duty of more than Rs 100 crore in 2013-14.

Pesticide maker Perfect Crop science was the biggest evader with Rs 9 crore of duty evasion. The director of the company was also arrested by excise department officials.

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After death of Tata Motors' MD Karl Slym, Cyrus Mistry looks to turn around Indian operations

The chairman's address to Tata Motors employees on the first day of April is a 26-year-old tradition. Never before has the setting for it been so hopeful and yet so anxious. Hopeful because five years after the disappointing Nano launch, the company finally has two new carsBolt, a premium hatchback, and Zest, a compact sedanto go to the market with.

Chairman Cyrus Mistry even went to the extent of calling the upcoming launches of these cars (and some trucks) an "inflexion point" for the Rs 1,89,000 crore ($34.7 billion) company.

Anxious because Tata Motors has to navigate this inflexion point without a CEO. Seventy five days after former Tata Motors MD Karl Slym's sudden demise, no internal candidate is in contention, nor is an external candidate in sight.

Chairman Mistry, though, is now playing a hands-on role. He has reorganised the Tata Motors' leadership unitpreviously, 12 managers reporting to Slyminto a five-member team reporting to him. The five are engineering and research president Tim Leverton, commercial vehicles ED R Pisharody, passenger vehicles president Ranjit Yadav, director-quality Satish Borwankar and CFO C Ramakrishnan.

Mistry also pulled in Stefan Berger, earlier with Jaguar Land Rover and now Tata Sons, to be part of all meetings with the Tata Motors leadership. Berger, part of the chairman's office and in charge of strategy, is playing an executive role in the committee, even as the search for an MD intensifies, say company officials.

Mistry has had two review meetings since February.

"Cyrus is very business driven, has sharper, shorter meetings, and has the appetite to think out of the box," says an executive who is part of the leadership team, on the condition of anonymity. In response to queries on the personnel reorganisation and succession planning, a company spokesperson said: "Certain organisational alignments were made in terms of reporting hierarchy of those previously reporting in to the MD, to enable seamless continuity of operational processes."

Implementer CEO

Highly-placed sources say Egon Zehnder has been given the mandate to search for Slym's successor. "Tata Motors' experience with two former expat CEOsCarl-Peter Forster and Slymdid not end well," says the CEO of another Mumbai-based search firm, not wanting to be named. "The company has decided to look at experienced Indians, someone who fits the business and culture of Tata Motors."

Much of the speculation has centred around two contenders: V Sumantran, the former vice-chairman of Ashok Leyland, and Wilfried Aulbur, the former MD of Mercedes India and current managing partner of Roland Berger Consultancy. Sumantran, 54, resigned from Ashok Leyland last month, triggering speculation that he may be headed towards Tata Motors, though more likely as an advisor than as a CEO candidate. "I do not want to respond to speculation," Sumantran told ET.

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After death of Tata Motors' MD Karl Slym, Cyrus Mistry looks to turn around Indian operations

Scientists in Singapore Develop Novel Ultra-Fast Electrical Circuits Using Light-Generated Tunneling Currents

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Newswise Assistant Professor Christian A. Nijhuis of the Department of Chemistry at the National University of Singapores (NUS) Faculty of Science, in collaboration with researchers from the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), namely Dr Bai Ping of the Institute of High Performance Computing and Dr Michel Bosman of the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering, has successfully designed and fabricated electrical circuits that can operate at hundreds of terahertz frequencies, which is tens of thousands times faster than todays state-of-the-art microprocessors.

This novel invention uses a new physical process called quantum plasmonic tunnelling. By changing the molecules in the molecular electronic device, the frequency of the circuits can be altered in hundreds of terahertz regime. The new circuits can potentially be used to construct ultra-fast computers or single molecule detectors in the future, and open up new possibilities in nano-electronic devices. The study is funded by the National Research Foundation (NRF) and A*STAR and results of the research were first published in prestigious scientific journal Science on 28 March 2014.

The quest to be super-small and super-fast

Light is used as an information carrier and transmitted in optical fibre cables. Photonic elements are large but they operate at extremely high frequencies of 100 terahertz about 10,000 times faster than the desktop computer. But current state-of-the-art nano-electronic devices operate at length scales that are much smaller, making it very difficult to combine the ultra-fast properties of photonic elements with nano-scale electronics.

Scientists have long known that light can interact with certain metals and can be captured in the form of plasmons, which are collective, ultra-fast oscillations of electrons that can be manipulated at the nano-scale. The so-called quantum plasmon modes have been theoretically predicted to occur at atomic length scales. However, current state-of-the-art fabrication techniques can only reach length scales that are about five nanometre larger, therefore quantum-plasmon effects have been difficult to investigate.

In this landmark study, the research team demonstrated that quantum-plasmonics is possible at length scales that are useful for real applications. Researchers successfully fabricated an element of a molecular electronic circuit using two plasmonic resonators, which are structures that can capture light in the form of plasmons, bridged by a layer of molecules that is exactly one molecule thick. The layer of molecules switches on the quantum plasmonic tunneling effects, enabling the circuits to operate at terahertz frequencies.

Dr Bosman used an advanced electron microscopy technique to visualise and measure the opto-electronic properties of these structures with nanometer resolution. The measurements revealed the existence of the quantum plasmon mode and that its speed could be controlled by varying the molecular properties of the devices.

By performing quantum-corrected simulations, Dr Bai confirmed that the quantum plasmonic properties could be controlled in the molecular electronic devices at frequencies 10,000 times faster than current processors.

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Scientists in Singapore Develop Novel Ultra-Fast Electrical Circuits Using Light-Generated Tunneling Currents

Discovery Center celebrates "NanoDays"

Animal Control adds additional weekend hours Animal Control adds additional weekend hours

The Amarillo Animal Control and the Amarillo-Panhandle Humane Society are adding additional weekend hours.

The Amarillo Animal Control and the Amarillo-Panhandle Humane Society are adding additional weekend hours.

Several groups of volunteers spent part of their day cleaning up trash along the sides of several highways in Amarillo.

Several groups of volunteers spent part of their day cleaning up trash along the sides of several highways in Amarillo.

An area 12 year old boy is helping better the lives of residents in Dalhart, one penny at a time.

An area 12 year old boy is helping better the lives of residents in Dalhart, one penny at a time.

Amarillo students looking to join a U.S. Service Academy had a chance Saturday to learn more about achieving their goals.

Amarillo students looking to join a U.S. Service Academy had a chance Saturday to learn more about achieving their goals.

A benefit rodeo to support a local boy who recently broke his back and has a brain abnormality was held Saturday afternoon in Clarendon College Texas Arena.

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Discovery Center celebrates "NanoDays"

Nanotechnology and the Concrete World: Small Science for a Big Future – Video


Nanotechnology and the Concrete World: Small Science for a Big Future
Dr. Florence Sanchez, Associate Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Vanderbilt University (www.cee.vanderbilt.edu) speciali...

By: Vanderbilt University

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Nanotechnology and the Concrete World: Small Science for a Big Future - Video

Archipelago unveils Silver Nano Ink at Printed Electronics Europe

Innovative young Cambridge UK business Archipelago Technology Group has developed a new ink manufacturing process to help unlock the huge potential of printed electronics.

The UK company launches its maiden product, Silver Nano Ink, in Berlin tomorrow (Wednesday 2 April) at Printed Electronics Europe the flagship conference for the industry.

As electronic devices like mobile phones, tablet computers and smart sensors, become more pervasive, smaller and more powerful, manufacturers are looking increasingly to new technology for printing electronic components to replace conventional manufacturing technologies.

Theres the rub. Moving these new techniques from the research lab to the factory floor depends on being able to make the specialist inks needed, made up of tiny nanoparticles of materials like silver and copper.

For volume manufacturing to be commercially viable, these nanoparticles each less than a ten-thousandth the thickness of a human hair must be the same size and shape.

Drawing on research in nanoparticle chemistry at the University of Cambridge and the expertise of Archipelagos physicists and engineers in bringing new inkjet printing technologies to market, Archipelago has developed an innovative solution.

Chief executive Guy Newcombe said: Companies in the printed electronics industry are finding it impossible to reach the quality levels they need from standard inks.

By drawing on our unusual blend of expertise in precision chemistry, and the physics and engineering of inkjet printing, we are now able to offer solutions which will help unlock the potential of the hugely important emerging printed electronics industry.

Archipelago was established in October 2012 by an experienced team, led by Dr Newcombe, who had previously worked together for many years at TTP Group, and chaired by David Connell. The company is based at St Johns Innovation Centre.

Together they have well over 50 years experience of taking new printing, drug delivery, sensing and measurement technologies from concept to market.

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Archipelago unveils Silver Nano Ink at Printed Electronics Europe

Nano Days at Cape Fear Museum

Submitted by Sara Hopkins on Sat, 03/29/2014 - 6:55pm.READ MORE:

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) -- A nation-wide education exhibit comes to the Port City.

The Cape Fear Museum hosts Nano Days.

Kids learned hands on about nanoscale science and engineering.

They interacted with experiments like Electroplating where kids got to make a nickle look like a penny

Third grader Max Kerrigan says he likes getting out of the classroom to learn more about science.

"Oh it's way different." Max said, "We don't do this kind of science stuff. The science there is kind of boring compared to this."

Nano days takes place nationally through April 6th.

Disclaimer: Comments posted on this, or any story are opinions of those people posting them, and not the views or opinions of WWAY NewsChannel 3, its management or employees. You can view our comment policy here.

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Nano Days at Cape Fear Museum

Nano scale, mega scope

12 hours ago Diagram of a tripod scanning stage based on three X7R MLCCs for an atomic force microscopy AFM imaging system

Research in China has shown that a common hybrid circuit component has potential for use as a micro-actuator. The industrial grade MLCCs tested display surprisingly little hysteresis, suggesting they could be of interest in many microactuation applications including nanoposition for scanning probe microscopes.

Limited options

Micro-actuation used for nanopositioning is important for nanotechnology tools such as the scanning probe microscope (SPM), that make use of micro-actuator nanopositioning systems with resolutions of less than a nanometer and travel ranges of several micrometers to allow researchers to study objects at the molecular and atomic levels.

Micro-actuators are normally made from piezoceramic or electrostrictor materials. One of the main issues with piezoelectric units is hysteretic behaviour between applied voltage and output mechanical displacement. This limits their use in high precision displacement tracking applications. Control strategies have been developed to overcome these limitations but none have provided satisfactory performance with regard to all the issues involved, i.e. speed, resolution, robustness and complexity. Electrostrictive devices, on the other hand, suffer far less from hysteresis but are limited by large temperature sensitivity and a highly nonlinear field-strain relationship.

Uncommon use

A team from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) in Hefei believe they have found an alternative solution in a commonly used electronic component the multilayer ceramic capacitor (MLCC). MLCCs are fundamental electronic components, typically making up 30% of the elements in a hybrid circuit board. They consist of a monolithic ceramic block surrounding comb-like sintered electrodes, with an electrical contact made by burnt-in metallic layers. There are several classes, defined by the type of ceramic dielectric material used, and it is members of the Class II MLCCs that have caught the USTC team's attention, those known by the designation X7R.

X7R MLCCs use mainly ferroelectric ceramics that exhibit piezoelectric effects. However, when used as a micro-actuator they display very little of the hysteretic behavior associated with piezoelectric materials. "The almost no-hysteresis behavior of the proposed X7R MLCC actuators allows simple manipulations in open-loop, high-precision displacement tracking applications. They do not require poling and have much better linear displacement and less temperature sensitivity than traditional electrostrictive materials. MLCC actuators seem to combine the benefits of traditional piezoelectric and electrostrictive actuators," said team member Dr Zhihua Feng .

As MLCCs share a stacked construction with piezoelectric stack actuators, but with much thinner dielectric layers, the team suspected that the electrostatic force generated inside the capacitors might be able to deform them. But their experiments showed that only extension deformations were generated, regardless of the polarity of the applied voltage, and calculations showed the electrostatic forces to be too weak to produce the observed strain. So, they theorised that a converse piezoelectric effect might be at work, but experiments showed that the piezoelectric effect in the MLCCs was rather weak. "Since the MLCCs had not been poled it could be the bias voltage that induced the net polarisation in the MLCCs and this was confirmed by the significantly enhanced piezoelectric effect with a DC bias applied on the MLCCs. At this point, we assume that the net polarisation in the MLCCs is due to the DC bias voltage and that the converse piezoelectric effect exists at that state," said Feng.

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Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science Celebrates Whats NEXT From Nano to Macro, Innovation at Every Scale

By cnews Date posted: March 31, 2014

The Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science and the Ryder Charitable Foundation are excited and proud to host a new two-day festival, NEXT: From Nano to Macro, Innovation at Every Scale. At NEXT, science and techie fans of all ages can learn about how technology is rapidly adapting to accommodate societys growing demand for the NEXT big thing. During the weekend, visitors will discover that innovation is everywhere from the obvious to the discreet. Activities include the following:

Explore the journey of new ideas from concept to reality through The NEXT Big Thing Innovation Showcase by University of Miamis The Launch Pad, and be inspired to create from inventors of a variety of ages and interests.

Climb in a big green truck from Ryder and electric cars from Tesla to learn about the latest technology in sustainable transportation.

Learn how current technological developments are leading to improvements for individuals and the environment, from better repairs for the human body to more sustainable transportation with the nano talk series including prominent innovators, scientists and engineers from Ryder, BioNIUM, and UMs Department of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering.

Dive into the Maker movement through two challenges. At the Mutants Maker Challenge, artist and designer Ernesto Oroza demonstrates how to repurpose the old to become new. During the Belly of the Beast Maker Activity, artist Kerry Phillips uses old and found objects to create a new community art project.*

Become the NEXT Maker with the Make Me a Maker activities series for kids led by REM Learning Center South Get animated by altering your surroundings through a visually striking projection mapping experience in the planetarium led by Phenomenal Experience Agency.

Discover how the very small can impact the very big with nano interactives provided by NISE Networks Nano Days, BioNIUM, and Materials Advantage FIU Chapter.

Stimulate your musical side with sound demos and activities with Arduino Musical Hopstotch by DCR Arduino Brigade.

Join The LAB Miami in its weekend long Hackathon Challenge with an app showcase on Sunday at 1pm. Pre-selected programming teams will have 24 hours to complete the challenge! (The public is welcome to attend the brainstorming kick-off event on Friday, April 4th at the Museum.)

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Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science Celebrates Whats NEXT From Nano to Macro, Innovation at Every Scale

IISc plans incubation centres for micro, nanotechnology

Prashanth G N, Bangalore, March 27, 2014, DHNS:

To foster micro and nano technologies, the IIScs Centre for Nano Science & Engineering (CNSe) plans to set up incubation centres within its campus. The Ministry of Communication and Information Technology (MCIT) is the nodal agency co-ordinated by CNSe.

According to IISc professor and CNSe head, Rudra Pratap, the plan is to build an ecosystem by establishing incubation centres both inside and outside the campus. We plan to assist 20 new companies and raise the number gradually. The proposal has been sent to MCIT, which is working out details of support to the IISc, he said.

Experts will interact with startups to provide knowledge and expertise. They will be given access to IIScs nano fabrication facility, the largest in the country, spread over 14,000 square feet.

The focus will be on development of sensors and sensor technology. The CNSe will concentrate on building prototypes of sensors for a variety of tasks from sensing an approaching vehicle to monitoring noise levels in the City, enabling people to lead a quality life.

Once the prototypes are ready, it will be productised in three to five years time. The long-term plan is to have sensors in bio-medical, health and energy fields.

Scientists say that if 300 companies are developed over 10 years, a very solid ecosystem for nano sciences and technology would have been developed. According to Pratap, the endeavour is be to be among the top ecosystems globally.

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Board of Trustees meets to discuss renovations

Published:Monday, March 24, 2014

Updated:Monday, March 24, 2014 22:03

The University of Connecticut Board of Trustees will meet Wednesday to consider a number of project budgets that include renovations to South Campus, the Engineering Building and a revised budget for the third phase of UConns technology park.

The board will consider revising the budget for the Innovation Partnership Building to $162 million. The multi-story research facility will be approximately 112,000 square feet and contain labs and offices.

Construction would be funded by state general obligation bonds, which were approved by the state legislature for the purpose of building a research-oriented technology park on UConns campus. The total bond budget for the project is $172 million.

Plans to demolish the UConn Health Centers Dowling North and South buildings will also be considered by the board. That project would cost an estimated $1.07 million. Additionally, plans to spend $598,000 to relocate the Anechoic Chamber at the Health Center will be considered.

A $3 million plan to fix infiltration problems and undertake exterior repairs to South Campus will also be considered. Finally, the board will consider a $92.5 million plan to develop a state of the art laboratory for research in bio-nano engineering, which would be funded by the UConn 2000 capital bond allotment.

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Board of Trustees meets to discuss renovations

Celebrate NanoDays 2014 at Sci-Quest, Hands-on Science Center

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. Sci-Quest, Hands-on Science Center will host NanoDays on Saturday, April 5, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Visitors of all ages will explore capillary action and non-Newtonian fluids, investigate new nano products and materials, and imagine what society might be like if we all wore invisibility cloaks. Other activities include using electricity to make a nickel coin look like a penny, and a program about Robots & People.

NanoDays at Sci-Quest is part of a nationwide festival of educational programs about nanoscale science and engineering. NanoDays activities are included with general admission to Sci-Quest. The event will be held at Sci-Quests new location at 1435 Paramount Drive in Huntsville, Alabama.

NanoDays is organized by the Nanoscale Informal Science Education Network (NISE Net), and takes place nationally from March 29 April 6, 2014. This community-based event is the largest public outreach effort in nanoscale informal science education and involves science museums, research centers, and universities from Puerto Rico to Alaska.

Sci-Quests NanoDays event will combine fun hands-on activities with presentations on current research. A range of exciting NanoDays activities demonstrate the special and unexpected properties found at the nanoscale, examine tools used by nanoscientists, showcase nano materials with spectacular promise, and invite discussion of technology and society.

For here for more information about Nano.

More about Nano and NISE Network

At the nanoscalethe scale of atoms and moleculesmany common materials exhibit unusual properties. Our ability to manipulate matter at this size enables innovations that werent possible before. Nanotechnology is revolutionizing research and development in medicine, computing, new materials, food, energy, and other areas.

Nano will affect our economy, the environment, and our personal lives. Some scientists think that future nanotechnologies and materials could transform our lives as much as cars, the personal computer, or the internet! But the costs, risks, and benefits of this new technology can be difficult to understand, both for experts and for the general public. The NISE Network helps museums, research institutions, and the public learn from each other about this emerging field so that together we can make informed decisions.

The Nanoscale Informal Science Education Network (NISE Net) is a national community of researchers and informal science educators dedicated to fostering public awareness, engagement, and understanding of nanoscale science, engineering, and technology. The NISE Network community in the United States is led by 14 organizations, and includes hundreds of museums and universities nationwide. NISE Net was launched in 2005 with funding from the National Science Foundation, and received a five-year renewal in 2010.

Through products like NanoDays, the NISE Network is actively building partnerships between science museums and research centers to increase their capacity to engage the public in learning about nanoscale science and engineering.

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Celebrate NanoDays 2014 at Sci-Quest, Hands-on Science Center

Research assistant/associate in in-situ characterisation of nno-structured silicon-based lithium ion batteries

(Fixed Term)

Location: West Cambridge, Cambridge

Salary: 24,289-36,661

A position exists for a Research Assistant/Research Associate to work on the In-situ Characterisation of Nano-structured Silicon-based Lithium Ion Batteries. The post is in collaboration with Prof Grey of the University of Cambridge Chemistry Department and funded under ERC project "InSituNANO" which explores atomic level mechanisms that govern the growth and device behaviour of nanomaterials in realistic process environments.

The successful candidate is expected to have or is close to obtaining a PhD in electrical engineering, chemistry, materials science or physics, and is required to have experience and a publication record in the use of nanomaterials, such as silicon nanowires, in Li ion batteries, as well as expertise in the characterisation of battery electrodes by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and X-ray diffraction. The post holder will be located in West Cambridge (Cambridge, UK), but will spend significant time also in the group of Prof. Grey in the Chemistry Department in central Cambridge. Tasks will include the development of appropriate research methods/metrology, the undertaking of an ambitious, frontier research program, management tasks for worldwide collaborations incl. industry and the wide dissemination of results.

The role holder will also have: experience and a publication record in the use of nanomaterials, such as silicon nanowires, in Li ion batteries, as well as expertise in the characterisation of battery electrodes by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and X-ray diffraction; ability to communicate ideas effectively with colleagues both orally and in writing; experience of research into the characterisation of battery electrodes by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and X-ray diffraction, also into the use of nanomaterials, such as silicon nanowires, in Li ion batteries; experience of writing research publications; interpersonal and leadership skills as required for interdisciplinary, collaborative research project and ability to manage own workload.

Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 12 months in the first instance.

Once an offer of employment has been accepted, the successful candidate will be required to undergo a health assessment.

To apply online for this vacancy and to view further information about the role, please click here.

This will take you to the role on the University's Job Opportunities pages. There you will need to click on the 'Apply online' button and register an account with the University's Web Recruitment System (if you have not already) and log in before completing the online application form.

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Research assistant/associate in in-situ characterisation of nno-structured silicon-based lithium ion batteries

Nanotube composites promise solar cell efficiency boost

March 19, 2014 // Paul Buckley

Researchers at Ume University in Sweden have discovered that controlled placement of the carbon nanotubes, CNTs, into nano-structures gives them the ability to transport charges up to 100 million times higher than previously measured.

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CNTs are one dimensional nanoscale cylinders made of carbon atoms that have high tensile strength and exceptional electron mobility.

There is an increasing trend of using carbon based nanostructured materials as components in solar cells. Due to their properties, carbon nanotubes are expected to enhance the performance of current solar cells through efficient charge transport inside the device. To achieve the highest performance for electronic applications, the carbon nanotubes need to be assembled into a well-ordered network of interconnecting nanotubes. So far conventional methods used today are far from optimal which results in low device performance.

In the new study, a team of physicists and chemists at Ume University joined forces to produce nano-engineered carbon nanotubes networks with novel properties by engineering CNTs into complex network architectures for the first time. The new strutures feature controlled nano-scale dimensions inside a polymer matrix.

We have found that the resulting nano networks possess exceptional ability to transport charges, up to 100 million times higher than previously measured carbon nanotube random networks produced by conventional methods, explained Dr David Barbero, leader of the project and assistant professor at the Department of Physics at Ume University.

The high degree of control of the method enables production of highly efficient nanotube networks with a small amount of nanotubes compared to other conventional methods, thereby strongly reducing materials costs.

In a previous study (Applied Physics Letters, Volume 103, Issue 2, 021116 (2013)) the research team of David R. Barbero already demonstrated that nano-engineered networks can be produced onto thin and flexible transparent electrodes that can be used in flexible solar cells. The new results are expected to accelerate the development of next generation of flexible carbon based solar cells, which are both more efficient and less expensive to produce.

Power Supplies/Batteries

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Nanotube composites promise solar cell efficiency boost

Plant Nanobionics Shows Promise After Leaves Infused With Carbon Nanotubes Saw 30% Boost In Energy Production

Carbon nanotubes are nano-sized cylinders of carbon atoms that are often found in carbon fiber products like baseball bats and golf clubs. After inserting carbon nanotubes coated in single-stranded DNA into the plants chloroplast, the centers of photosynthesis, researchers see a 30 percent increase in the plants ability to capture and convert light energy, they report. Chlorophyll, the pigment found in chloroplast that absorbs incoming sunlight, normally takes in just a small fraction of the light in the 400- to 500-nanometer and 600- to 700-nanometer range. The carbon nanotubes widened this range to allow the plants to absorb more light.

According to the MIT study, published in the journal Nature Materials, the process works by spurring the pigments in the plants to transfer electrons between multiple photosystems more efficiently.

This is a marvelous demonstration of how nanotechnology can be coupled with synthetic biology to modify and enhance the function of living organisms -- in this case, plants, James Collins, a professor of biomedical engineering at Boston University who was not involved in the research, said in a statement. The authors nicely show that self-assembling nanoparticles can be used to enhance the photosynthetic capacity of plants, as well as serve as plant-based biosensors and stress reducers.

Researchers from MIT utilized Arabidopsis thaliana,a type of cress thats often used in plant research, for their experiment. To see how the nanotubes affect photosynthesis, the team used a dye that changes color when electrons are absorbed. Photosynthesis produces these charged particles. The more photosynthesis that took place, the more dramatic the color of the dye became.

Plants are very attractive as a technology platform, Michael Strano, a professor of Chemical Engineering and lead author of the study, said in a statement. They repair themselves, theyre environmentally stable outside, they survive in harsh environments, and they provide their own power source and water distribution.

Scientists say improving a plants energy output has a variety of applications. Nanobionics could lead to self-powered pollution monitors and detectors for chemical weapons.

"Right now, almost no one is working in this emerging field," Juan Pablo Giraldo, a plant biologist and study author, said in a statement. "It's an opportunity for people from plant biology and the chemical engineering nanotechnology community to work together in an area that has a large potential."

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Plant Nanobionics Shows Promise After Leaves Infused With Carbon Nanotubes Saw 30% Boost In Energy Production

Nano technique boosts plant energy production and creates plant biosensors

In 2010, Stanford University researchers reported harnessing energy directly from chloroplasts, the cellular "power plants" within plants where photosynthesis takes place. Now, by embedding different types of carbon nanotubes into these chloroplasts, a team at MIT has boosted plants' ability to capture light energy. As well as opening up the possibility of creating "bionic plants" with enhanced energy production, the same approach could be used to create plants with environmental monitoring capabilities.

Chloroplasts are self-contained units that contain all the machinery required for photosynthesis the conversion of sunlight into chemical energy. Although they can still function when removed from plants, they start to break down after a few hours because light and oxygen damage the photosynthetic proteins. This damage is usually repaired by the plants, but chloroplasts are unable to do this on their own.

As part of an attempt to enhance the photosynthetic function of chloroplasts that were extracted from plants for possible use in solar cells, the MIT research team led by Michael Strano, the Carbon P. Dubbs Professor of Chemical Engineering, embedded them with cerium oxide nanoparticles. These nanoparticles, which are also known as nanoceria, are very strong antioxidants and the hope was that they would protect the chloroplasts from damage and prolong their productivity by scavenging oxygen radicals and other highly reactive molecules produced by light and oxygen.

The nanoceria were delivered into the chloroplasts using a new technique called lipid exchange envelope penetration (LEEP), which was developed by the team. This involves wrapping the nanoparticles in polyacrylic acid, a highly charged molecule, which allows the particles to penetrate the fatty, hydrophobic membranes that surrounds the chloroplasts. Using this technique, the researchers were able to significantly reduce the levels of the damaging molecules.

Building on this research, the team then used the LEEP technique to embed semiconducting carbon nanotubes coated in negatively charged DNA into the chloroplasts. The scientists believed that the carbon nanotubes could allow the plants to make use of more than the 10 percent of sunlight they usually make use of by acting as artificial antennae that would capture wavelengths of light beyond their normal range, such as ultraviolet, green and near-infrared.

Measuring the rate of electron flow through the thylakoid membranes within the chloroplasts, the researchers saw an increase in photosynthetic activity of 49 percent compared to isolated chloroplasts without the embedded nanotubes. Chloroplasts to which both nanoceria and carbon nanotubes were delivered together also remained active for a few hours longer than normal.

To test the approach on living plants, the team then used a technique called vascular infusion to deliver nanoparticles to Arabidopsis thaliana, a small flowering plant commonly known as thale cress. This involved applying a solution of nanoparticles to the underside of the leaf, where it penetrated the plant through tiny pores through which the plant usually takes in carbon dioxide in and expels oxygen. The nanotubes made their way to the chloroplasts, resulting in a boost in photosynthetic electron flow of about 30 percent.

Photosynthesis involves two stages. The first sees green chlorophyll pigments absorb light, which excites electrons that flow through the thylakoid membranes within the chloroplasts. This electrical energy is then captured by the plant to power the second stage the production of sugars. The researchers say it is still unclear how boosting the electron flow using nanoparticles affects the plants' sugar production.

The MIT team says the same approach used to enhance the Arabidopsis thaliana plants' energy production could also be used to turn them into chemical sensors. MIT researchers have previously developed carbon nanotube sensors that can identify various different chemicals, including hydrogen peroxide, TNT and sarin. These consist of carbon nanotubes that glow when a polymer in which they are wrapped binds with the target molecule.

"We could someday use these carbon nanotubes to make sensors that detect in real time, at the single-particle level, free radicals or signaling molecules that are at very low-concentration and difficult to detect," says postdoc and plant biologist Juan Pablo Giraldo.

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Nano technique boosts plant energy production and creates plant biosensors

7 awesome small-cars coming soon to India

Maruti Alto K10 AMT/facelift

Recently a newspaper report suggested that Maruti is considering an AMT for the Alto K10. The company disrupted the B1 segment by offering this game-changing feature on the Celerio which now has a 6-month waiting period.

The Celerio was a test bed for the technology and now that 50 per cent of the 22,000-plus bookings are for the AMT, Maruti wants to extend this to other carlines.

The AMT for the Celerio, supplied by Magneti Marelli, and currently imported, would very likely be used on the Alto K10, and could come in a localised state.

The Alto K10 AMT is expected to hit showrooms by the end of this year and could simultaneously debut the cosmetic update.

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