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Archive for the ‘nanotechnology’ category: Page 4

Sep 9, 2024

To make Mars warmer, just add nanorods

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, space

Releasing engineered nanoparticles into the Martian atmosphere could warm the planet by over 30 K.

Sep 9, 2024

Nanoscale silver exhibits intrinsic self-healing abilities without external intervention

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biological, nanotechnology

As an innovative concept in materials science and engineering, the inspiration for self-healing materials comes from living organisms that have the innate ability to self-heal. Along this line, the search for self-healing materials has been generally focused on “soft” materials like polymers and hydrogels. For solid-state metals, one may intuitively imagine that any form of self-healing will be much more difficult to achieve.

Sep 6, 2024

New high-temperature adhesive mimics beetle adhesion for heat-sensitive applications

Posted by in category: nanotechnology

This bioinspired adhesive, using fluororubber and carbon nanotubes, withstands temperatures over 200 Celsius while providing strong, residue-free adhesion.

Sep 6, 2024

Scientists create army of tiny robots that can be injected into the human body

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology, robotics/AI

Researchers said the study showed nanobots had the potential to transport drugs to precise locations.

Sep 6, 2024

Researchers develop light-charged supercapacitor for self-powered devices

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, nanotechnology, physics

Researchers at the Department of Instrumentation and Applied Physics (IAP), Indian Institute of Science (IISc) and collaborators have designed a new supercapacitor that can be charged by light shining on it. Such supercapacitors can be used in various devices, including streetlights and self-powered electronic devices such as sensors.

Capacitors are electrostatic devices that store energy as charges on two metal plates called electrodes. Supercapacitors are upgraded versions of capacitors—they exploit electrochemical phenomena to store more energy, explains Abha Misra, Professor at IAP and corresponding author of the study published in the Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

The electrodes of the new were made of (ZnO) nanorods grown directly on fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO), which is transparent. It was synthesized by Pankaj Singh Chauhan, first author and CV Raman postdoctoral fellow in Misra’s group at IISc.

Sep 4, 2024

Nanostructures enable on-chip lightwave-electronic frequency mixer

Posted by in categories: computing, nanotechnology

Now imagine a frequency mixer that works at a quadrillion (PHz, petahertz) times per second—up to a million times faster. This corresponds to the oscillations of the electric and magnetic fields that make up .

Petahertz-frequency mixers would allow us to shift signals up to and then back down to more conventional electronic frequencies, enabling the transmission and processing of vastly larger amounts of information at many times higher speeds. This leap in speed isn’t just about doing things faster; it’s about enabling entirely new capabilities.

Lightwave electronics (or petahertz electronics) is an emerging field that aims to integrate optical and electronic systems at incredibly high speeds, leveraging the ultrafast oscillations of light fields. The key idea is to harness the electric field of light waves, which oscillate on sub-femtosecond (10-15 seconds) timescales, to directly drive electronic processes.

Sep 4, 2024

Seeing like a butterfly: Optical invention enhances camera capabilities

Posted by in categories: food, nanotechnology, robotics/AI

Butterflies can see more of the world than humans, including more colors and the field oscillation direction, or polarization, of light. This special ability enables them to navigate with precision, forage for food and communicate with one another. Other species, like the mantis shrimp, can sense an even wider spectrum of light, as well as the circular polarization, or spinning states, of light waves. They use this capability to signal a “love code,” which helps them find and be discovered by mates.

Inspired by these abilities in the animal kingdom, a team of researchers at the Penn State College of Engineering has developed an ultrathin optical element known as a metasurface, which can attach to a conventional camera and encode the spectral and polarization data of images captured in a snapshot or video through tiny, antenna-like nanostructures that tailor light properties. A machine learning framework, also developed by the team, then decodes this multi-dimensional visual information in real-time on a standard laptop.

The researchers have published their work in Science Advances.

Sep 4, 2024

Entangled photon pairs enable hidden image encoding

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, quantum physics

Researchers at the Paris Institute of Nanoscience at Sorbonne University have developed a new method to encode images into the quantum correlations of photon pairs, making it invisible to conventional imaging techniques. The study is published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

Sep 4, 2024

Specialist ‘carbon nanotube’ AI chip built by Chinese scientists is 1st of its kind and ‘1,700 times more efficient’ than Google’s

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, robotics/AI

Scientists in China have developed a tensor processing unit (TPU) that uses carbon-based transistors instead of silicon – and they say it’s extremely energy efficient.

Sep 4, 2024

A new method captures the stochastic dynamics in coherent X-ray imaging

Posted by in categories: biological, chemistry, nanotechnology, space

Coherent X-ray imaging has emerged as a powerful tool for studying both nanoscale structures and dynamics in condensed matter and biological systems. The nanometric resolution together with chemical sensitivity and spectral information render X-ray imaging a powerful tool to understand processes such as catalysis, light harvesting or mechanics.

Unfortunately these processes might be random or stochastic in nature. In order to obtain freeze-frame images to study stochastic dynamics, the X-ray fluxes must be very high, potentially heating or even destroying the samples.

Also, detectors acquisition rates are insufficient to capture the fast nanoscale processes. Stroboscopic techniques allow imaging ultrafast repeated processes. But only mean dynamics can be extracted, ruling out measurement of stochastic processes, where the system evolves through a different path in phase space during each measurement. These two obstacles prevent coherent imaging from being applied to complex systems.

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