Researchers at the Max Planck Institute in Golm near Potsdam have now made
a contribution by demonstrating that calcium carbonate
crystals are created differently from the way they were previously thought to
form.
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...
By using magnetic nanoparticles,
the researchers were able to remove 96 % of the lead ions from blood samples
mixed with lead in vitro.
Ekocrete, Inc. today announced the availability of a new "green" concrete that uses 90% recycled and by-product materials without sacrificing strength or durability.
"Previous so-called green concretes...
University
of Arkansas have demonstrated that magnetic nanotubes combined with nerve
growth factor can enable specific cells to differentiate into neurons. The results
from in vitro studies show that magnetic nanotubes may be exploited to treat
neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's
disease because they can be used as a delivery vehicle for nerve growth factor.
Information obtained from a new application of photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is worth its weight in gold to breast cancer patients.
For the first time, Lihong Wang, Ph.D., Gene K. Beare Distinguished Professor in th...
Nanotubes, the tiny honeycomb cylinders of carbon atoms only a few nanometers.
wide, are perhaps the signature material of modern engineering research, but
actually trying to organize the atomic scale rods is notoriously like herding
cats.
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.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has acknowledged that its voluntary approach to reporting has yielded only limited information on a small fraction of the hundreds of potentially toxic nanomaterials already...
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