Sentences with phrase «nature nanotechnology»

In order for nanotechnology not to be another case study on how NOT to introduce a new technology to society, Nature Nanotechnology study authors Steffen Foss Hansen, Andrew Maynard, Anders Baun and Joel A. Tickner warn that nanotechnology needs to quickly catch up in terms of standards and research.
Nature Nanotechnology 4, no. 2: 87 — 91.
London About Blog Nature Nanotechnology offers a unique mix of news and reviews alongside top - quality research papers.
London About Blog Nature Nanotechnology offers a unique mix of news and reviews alongside top - quality research papers.
Nature Nanotechnology (2014) doi: 10.1038 / nnano.2014.156 Published online 17 August 2014
The research appears in the April 4 advanced online edition of the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
Nature Nanotechnology (2015) doi: 10.1038 / nnano.2015.141 Published online 13 July 2015
In 2016, Kelley and her team published a study in Nature Nanotechnology that first introduced the microfluidic device and how it could be used to trap and analyze CTCs.
The new MIT research, published online this week in the journal Nature Nanotechnology [abstract], is based on findings that carbon nanotubes — microscopic, hollow cylinders of pure carbon — can enhance the efficiency of electron collection from a solar cell's surface.
Switching of a coupled spin pair in a single - molecule junction, Stefan Wagner et al., Nature Nanotechnology (2013), doi: 10.1038 / nnano.2013.133.
Nature Nanotechnology Reports about How Researchers Control the Magnetism of a Single Molecule by Voltage
Reference: The paper, «An environmentally benign antimicrobial nanoparticle based on a silver - infused lignin core», is published online in the journal Nature Nanotechnology (Nat.
The team, reporting its work in Nature Nanotechnology doi: 10.1038 / s41565 -017-0029-3, says that it is now busy further developing tools for metagenomics - based risk assessment — in particular with respect to antibiotic - resistance genes and their relation to environmental stressors.
In a study being published July 13 in Nature Nanotechnology, NC State engineer Orlin Velev and colleagues show that silver - ion infused lignin nanoparticles, which are coated with a charged polymer layer that helps them adhere to the target microbes, effectively kill a broad swath of bacteria, including E. coli and other harmful microorganisms.
The study, reported today in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, presents the newest entry in a class of substances known as bicontinuous jammed emulsion gels, or bijels, which hold promise as a malleable liquid that can support catalytic reactions, electrical conductivity, and energy conversion.
As described Aug. 10 in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, Hybrid Photonic - Nanomechanical Force Microscopy (HPFM) can discern a sample's topographic characteristics together with the chemical properties at a much finer scale.
Nature Nanotechnology (2017) doi: 10.1038 / s41565 -017-0023-9 Published online: 18 December 2017
As a hybrid, the instrument, described in a paper published in Nature Nanotechnology, combines the disciplines of nanospectroscopy and nanomechanical microscopy.
In a newly published paper in Nature Nanotechnology («Ultrahard carbon film from epitaxial two - layer graphene»), researchers across The City University of New York (CUNY) describe a process for creating diamene: flexible, layered sheets of graphene that temporarily become harder than diamond and impenetrable upon impact.
The researchers published their findings today in Nature Nanotechnology.
TagsTouch Device, Heals AIling Organs, Tissue Nano Transfection, Cures Brain Injuries, silicon chip TNT, genetic codes, Chandan Sen, Nature Nanotechnology, Food and Drug Administration, Walter Reed National Medical Center
The researchers, reporting their work in Nature Nanotechnology doi: 10.1038 / s41565 -018-0112-4, say that they would now like to further improve the design of their approach.
Publication: Julián Valero, Nibedita Pal, Soma Dhakal, Nils G. Walter and Michael Famulok: A bio-hybrid DNA rotor - stator nanoengine that moves along predefined tracks, Nature Nanotechnology, DOI: 10.1038 / s41565 -018-0109-z:
In the study, published today in Nature Nanotechnology,...
«The Evolving Landscape of Drug Products Containing Nanomaterials in the United States,» by Sheetal R. D'Mello et al., Nature Nanotechnology, June 2017.
A paper published today in Nature Nanotechnology describes the physical processes behind this spectacle, which turned out to be the first experimental viewing of a phenomenon theorized 20 - some years ago.
REFERENCE: Satish K. Nune, David Lao, David J. Heldebrant, Jian Liu, Matthew J. Olszta, Ravi Kukkadapu, Lyle M. Gordon, Manjula I. Nandasiri, Greg Whyatt, Chris Clayton, David W. Gotthold, Mark H. Engelhard, Herbert T. Schaef, «Anomalous Water Expulsion from Carbon - Based Rods at High Humidity,» Nature Nanotechnology, June 13, 2016, DOI: 10.1038 / NNANO.2016.91.
PNNL researchers Satish Nune and David Heldebrant are corresponding authors on a Nature Nanotechnology paper that describes the first experimental viewing of a phenomnenon called «solvent cavitation under solvo - phobic confinement.»
To overcome the limitations of the two approaches, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have created a device that combines elements of both, which they described in a February study in Nature Nanotechnology.
A team led by Latha Venkataraman, professor of applied physics and chemistry at Columbia Engineeringand Xavier Roy, assistant professor of chemistry (Arts & Sciences), published a study (DOI 10.1038 / nnano.2017.156) today in Nature Nanotechnology that is the first to reproducibly demonstrate current blockade — the ability to switch a device from the insulating to the conducting state where charge is added and removed one electron at a time — using atomically precise molecular clusters at room temperature.
«The key aspect of the Bell test is that it is extremely unforgiving: any imperfection in the preparation, manipulation and read - out protocol will cause the particles to fail the test,» said Dr Juan Pablo Dehollain, a UNSW Research Associate who with Dr Stephanie Simmons was a lead author of the Nature Nanotechnology paper.
The point was further emphasized in a press release put out by Nature Nanotechnology this week: «These findings suggest that direct and indirect effects of nanoparticles on cells are equally crucial when considering the potential risks of their use in nanomedicine.»
Nature Nanotechnology not only highlighted the paper in a news release but also organized the press conference, drawing additional attention to the study.
Their work has been published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
Their findings appear in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
«In principle what we are doing is letting calcium influx into a cell remotely,» says Arnd Pralle, an assistant professor of physics at S.U.N.Y. Buffalo and a co-author of the Nature Nanotechnology study.
The group, including graduate student Lingping Zeng and Institute Professor Mildred Dresselhaus of MIT, Yongjie Hu of the University of California at Los Angeles, and Austin Minnich of Caltech, has published its results this week in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
The work has been published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology on 2 March 2014.
This is the first time scientists have combined heat and nanomagnetic particles to control cellular function, and the new technique, published online June 27 in Nature Nanotechnology, offers certain advantages over earlier and alternative methods of ion - channel manipulation.
The technique, detailed Aug. 21 in Nature Nanotechnology, gives scientists an opportunity to understand certain interactions among cells that have previously been hard to track.
Nature Nanotechnology publishes the results on October 26.
Research led by Rein Ulijn, Director of the CUNY Advanced Science Research Center (ASRC)'s Nanoscience Initiative and Professor of Chemistry at Hunter College, has paved the way for the development of dynamically - evolving polymers that form spontaneously by adapting to their environment, which may lead to a number of product possibilities including drug delivery, food science and cosmetics, the results of which were published today in Nature Nanotechnology.
(Nature Nanotechnology, which is independent of Nature's news team, is a sponsor of the race.)
The work appears in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
The researchers, who report their findings today online in Nature Nanotechnology, haven't yet figured out how to string thousands of these units together.
The research, which could re-ignite interest in the use of DNA - based wires and devices in the development of programmable circuits, appears in the journal Nature Nanotechnology under the title «Long - range charge transport in single G - quadruplex DNA molecules.»
In a paper published today in Nature Nanotechnology, an international group of scientists announced the most significant breakthrough in a decade toward developing DNA - based electrical circuits.
«To me, it was a victorious moment that finally justified a long - term effort, going through multiple trials and errors,» says Yoon, lead author of the paper in Nature Nanotechnology.
Hosang Yoon is lead author of the paper in Nature Nanotechnology, with corresponding authors Donhee Ham at Harvard SEAS and Philip Kim at Columbia.
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