Tennis players around the world soon will be able to gain extra power and
longer string life thanks to DuPont
Teflon friction-reducing polymer.
Today, Airbus starts construction work on the final assembly line for the A350 XWB, the new highly efficient wide-body aircraft scheduled to enter service in 2013.
The 74,000 m2 factory will house the first stages of ...
CATALYX NANOTECH, INC., is teaming with Dudek to pursue low-cost, "green" high-grade graphite and hydrogen production with no by-products using a patented technology. Catalyx Nanotech, a privately funded compan...
Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute have developed and demonstrated a new type of light emitting diode
(LED) with significantly improved lighting performance and energy efficiency.
Siemens Energy received a contract from its Indian licensee Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd. (BHEL) for the supply of components for two steam turbine-generators. The customer is the state-owned energy utility National Ther...
DuPont Nonwovens Vice
President and General Manager Barry Granger recently delivered the keynote speech
at Filtration 2008: International Conference and Exhibition, in Philadelphia,
Pa. Barry spoke to more than 100 people in the air filtration value chain. He
talked about how DuPont's commitment to sustainability and energy efficient
products led to filtration, a market segment where DuPont can help make a difference
through technology that eliminates tiny particles in our air, water and industrial
fluids.
In a recent paper, researchers at
the National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST) described a new method for creating gas detectors
so sensitive that some day they may be able to register these tiny emissions
from a single cell.
In a finding straight out of science fiction, chemical and biomolecular engineers
in Maryland are describing development of microscopic, chemically triggered
robotic "hands" that can pick up and move small objects.
Physicists at the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI) of the National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Maryland
have proposed a recipe for turning ultracold "boson" atoms-the ingredients of
Bose-Einstein condensates-into a "supersolid," an exotic state of matter that
behaves simultaneously as a solid and a friction-free superfluid.
Engineers at the University of
Michigan have formalized an important relationship with General Motors to
accelerate the design and testing of advanced batteries for electric vehicles.
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