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nanotube: search
Nanotube-suppliers.com, the site ranked number 1 among primary Internet search engines for the query "nanotube(s) supplier(s)", now allows nanotube buyers to contact more than 40 international nanotube suppliers by sending a single e-mail message.
in Nanotech
via Nanotechnology News @ 23:37 5th Jun
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FAST FLOW THROUGH CARBON NANOTUBES: The animation starts with the depiction of the water flow through a regular "rough" pipe. The molecules near the wall stick to it and move much slower than the molecules in the middle of the pipe. Colors indicate the speed of the molecules -- green are fast, yellow are slower, red are the slowest. The rough pipe fades and the carbon nanotube appears. All the molecules in the carbon nanotube move fast (green). They do not stick to the surface of the nanotube because that surface is very slippery. The water molecules travel in chains because they interact with each other strongly via hydrogen bonds. These two effects (the slippery nanotube surface and formation of water molecule chains inside the nanotube) combine to produce this phenomenon of ultra-fast flow through carbon nanotubes.
in Nanotech
via Nanotechnology News @ 11:16 10th Jun
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Carbon nanotube chips appear ready for commercialization, claims the first foundry offering carbon nanotube thin films to fabless chip makers.
in Nanotech
via Nanoforum @ 7:51 4th Jun
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PORTLAND, Ore. — Carbon nanotube chips appear ready for commercialization, claims the first foundry offering carbon nanotube thin films to fabless chip makers.
in Nanotech
via Electronics Supply & Manufacturing @ 19:42 3rd Jun
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PORTLAND, Ore. — Carbon nanotube chips appear ready for commercialization, claims the first foundry offering carbon nanotube thin films to fabless chip makers.
in Nanotech
via Mobile Handset Design Line @ 23:06 2nd Jun
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PORTLAND, Ore. — Carbon nanotube chips appear ready for commercialization, claims the first foundry offering carbon nanotube thin films to fabless chip makers.
in Nanotech
via EE Times @ 23:07 2nd Jun
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To accelerate the commercialisation of carbon nanotube-based electronics products, carbon nanotube (CNT) semiconductor device developer Nantero said it is working with semiconductor development foundry SVTC Technologies to install a "CMOS-friendly" CNT process at SVTC's fabs in San Jose, Calif, and Austin, Texas.
in Nanotech
via Electronic Weekly @ 1:20 4th Jun
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"It will be focusing on the research, development and manufacturing of carbon nanotube field emission displays to step into the field of flat panel display panel and modules. It will, at the same time, develop carbon nanotube and other nano-composite applications," said the company, Taipei-based TECO Nanotech, in a statement.
in Nanotech
via Electronic Weekly @ 1:13 23rd Jul
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(Nanowerk News) Unidym, Inc, a majority-owned subsidiary of Arrowhead Research Corporation (NASDAQ:ARWR), announced that it will participate in the upcoming Society for Information Display (SID) International Symposium, Seminar and Exhibition at the Los Angeles Convention Center May 18th through 23rd. The company will be exhibiting its carbon nanotube-based transparent conductive electrodes designed for use in displays and touch panels at its booth (#504). In addition, Unidym’s CTO, Dr. Paul Drzaic, will chair a session discussing e-paper (Session 46) and present a short paper (Session 37.4) discussing the integration of carbon nanotube-based transparent electrodes into display applications.
in Nanotech
via Nanowerk @ 1:04 20th May
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Unidym, Inc, a majority-owned subsidiary of Arrowhead Research Corporation (NASDAQ:ARWR), announced today that Samsung Electronics is demonstrating the world's first carbon nanotube-based active matrix electrophoretic display (EPD) e-paper in its booth at the Society for Information Display (SID) International Symposium, Seminar and Exhibition at the Los Angeles Convention Center from May 18th through May 23rd. The new e-paper device is the result of an ongoing joint development program between Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. and Unidym. The e-paper device uses a carbon nanotube transparent electrode developed by Unidym.
in Nanotech
via Nanotechnology News @ 6:50 25th May
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Edinburgh, Scotland, researchers have found that nanotube strengtheners used in computers, auto bodies and electrical brushes could be as dangerous as asbestos. They said long nanotubes injected into mice caused a reaction that typically leads to the fatal cancer mesothelioma. The scientists called for factory protection and more study.
in Nanotech
via Sci-Tech Today @ 12:28 22nd May
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A theoretical carbon nanotube cable could not only be invisible, but also strong enough to support a person's weight
in Nanotech
via Addict3d.org @ 16:28 20th Jul
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Yesterday we got a peek at the combined power of nanotubes—technology that makes a rope-driven space elevator feasible—but what can just one do on its own? Berkeley researchers have discovered that one nanotube can be used as a tiny platform to determine the mass of a single atom.
in Nanotech
via Gizmodo @ 23:36 22nd Jul
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New research suggests that networks of single-walled carbon nanotubes printed onto bendable plastic perform well as semiconductors in integrated circuits. Researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign [profile] (UIUC) and Purdue University [profile], whose work appears this week in Nature, say that these nanotube networks could replace organic semiconductors in applications such as flexible displays.
in Nanotech
via Nanotechnology.com @ 5:34 25th Jul
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Spin carbon nanotubes onto a specially coated surface and semiconducting nanotubes separate from metallic tubes, congregate and align -- all in one step. The resulting thin films are efficient transistors. The process could make mass-produced carbon nanotube transistors commercially viable.
in Nanotech
via Technology Research News @ 7:17 10th Jul
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I know what you're wondering - when, oh when, is cutting edge modern technology going to be used to help our travelling circus friends? Well don't worry, it won't be long now. Scientists have calculated that an invisible Carbon Nanotube rope just 1cm thick and invisible to the naked eye could support the weight of a human, potentially putting a radical new twist on boring old tightrope walks (but potentially destroying the mime industry).
in Nanotech
via Yahoo! UK and Ireland @ 14:05 22nd Jul
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Ruthenium Porphyrin Functionalized Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Arrays—A Step Toward Light Harvesting Antenna and Multibit Information Storage
in Nanotech
via American Chemical Society @ 14:55 14th Jun
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ApNano Materials Announces Major Breakthrough in Industrial Nanotube Production for Bullet Proof Vests
in Nanotech
via Nanowerk @ 19:29 30th Jun
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Nantero, Inc., a nanotechnology company using carbon nanotubes (CNTs) for the development of next-generation semiconductor devices, has announced collaboration with SVTC Technologies to accelerate the commercialization of nanotube-based electronics products. Nantero has developed a "CMOS-friendly" proprietary CNT process that it will install at SVTC's two state-of-the-art development fabs, in San Jose, Calif., and Austin, Texas.
in Nanotech
via Nanotechnology News @ 19:42 3rd Jun
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WOBURN, Mass. - Nantero, Inc., a nanotechnology company using carbon nanotubes (CNTs) for the development of next-generation semiconductor devices, has announced collaboration with SVTC Technologies to accelerate the commercialization of nanotube-based electronics products. Nantero has
in Nanotech
via Earthtimes.org @ 23:07 2nd Jun
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(Nanowerk News) Nantero, Inc., a nanotechnology company using carbon nanotubes (CNTs) for the development of next-generation semiconductor devices, has announced collaboration with SVTC Technologies to accelerate the commercialization of nanotube-based electronics products. Nantero has developed a “CMOS-friendly” proprietary CNT process that it will install at SVTC’s two state-of-the-art development fabs, in San Jose, Calif., and Austin, Texas.
in Nanotech
via Nanowerk @ 23:05 2nd Jun
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WOBURN, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 2, 2008--Nantero, Inc., a nanotechnology company using carbon nanotubes (CNTs) for the development of next-generation semiconductor devices, has announced collaboration with SVTC Technologies to accelerate the commercialization of nanotube-based electronics products. Nantero has developed a “CMOS-friendly” proprietary CNT process that it will install at SVTC’s two state-of-the-art development fabs, in San Jose, Calif., and Austin, Texas.
in Nanotech
via Macro World Investor @ 23:06 2nd Jun
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