Nano One Enhances Pilot Productivity and Files a New Patent – GlobeNewswire (press release)

August 02, 2017 04:02 ET | Source: Nano One Materials Corp.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Aug. 02, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Dr. Stephen Campbell, Principal Scientist at Nano One Materials (TSX-V:NNO) (Frankfurt:LBMB)(OTC:NNOMF), today announced that Nano One has filed a patent related to yield improvements in its process for the manufacture of lithium metal oxide cathode materials for use in advanced lithium ion batteries.

The process improvements in this patent application have been demonstrated in the lab. Extrapolating the lab results, Nano One anticipates a 100-fold increase in the material throughput of its core technology at the reactor stage of the process. Specifically, the throughput of the existing pilot reactor could be increased from 10 kg/day, as initially conceived, to as high as 1400 kg/day. This yield is in line with current commercial production rates of cathode materials ranging from 1,000 to 10,000 kg/day. The remaining process steps are readily scalable to support the design of a full-scale plant. From industry reports, Nano One estimates that the global addressable market for cathode materials is approximately 500,000 kg/day.

These innovations move our pilot sized reactor into the range of full scale production, explained Dr. Campbell, and demonstrate a clear path to a 10,000 kg/day plant. The resulting reduction in capital expenses lowers the barrier to commercial adoption and makes Nano Ones technology even more attractive to industrial interests. It builds on innovations announced earlier and marks our fifth patent application since this time last year.

Nano One has been testing productivity concepts for some time in the lab. The pilot was designed and built to accommodate these concepts and demonstration of the elevated throughputs is expected this year. The technology was developed under a collaboration agreement between Nano One, NORAM Engineering and Constructors Ltd and BC Research Inc. Under the agreement, Nano One is assigned right, title and interest in arising intellectual property and accordingly a patent application has been filed with the U.S. Patent Office.

Nano One CEO Dan Blondal said that The throughput of our pilot reactor is significantly more compelling than originally anticipated and we look forward to discussing the reduced cost implications with a growing network of commercial interests. Wed like to acknowledge the team at Nano One for their dedication and know-how throughout the pilot program and thank NORAM and BC Research for their engineering expertise and innovations.

Nano One would also like to thank Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada for their ongoing support of the pilot plant project and these technology developments through both Sustainable Development Technology Canada and the Automotive Suppliers Innovation Program.

Nano One Materials Corp.

Dan Blondal, CEO

For information with respect to Nano One or the contents of this news release, please contact John Lando (President) at (604) 669-2701 or visit the website atwww.nanoone.ca.

About Nano One:

Nano One Materials Corp (Nano One or the Company) is developing patented technology for the low-cost production of high performance battery materials used in electric vehicles, energy storage and consumer electronics. The processing technology addresses fundamental supply chain constraints by enabling wider raw materials specifications for use in lithium ion batteries. The process can be configured for a range of different nanostructured materials and has the flexibility to shift with emerging and future battery market trends and a diverse range of other growth opportunities. The novel three-stage process uses equipment common to industry and Nano One is building a pilot plant to demonstrate high volume production. The pilot plant is being funded with the assistance and support of the Government of Canada through Sustainable Development Technology Canada (SDTC) and the Automotive Supplier Innovation Program (ASIP). Nano One also receives financial support from the National Research Council of Canada Industrial Research Assistance Program (NRC-IRAP). Nano Ones mission is to establish its patented technology as a leading platform for the global production of a new generation of nanostructured composite materials. For more information, please visit http://www.nanoone.ca

About NORAM and BC Research

NORAM Engineering and Constructors Ltd. and their subsidiary, BC Research Inc., supply proprietary engineering and equipment packages to the chemical, pulp and paper, minerals processing and electrochemical sectors. They are recognized worldwide as a leader in the fields of nitration, sulfuric acid and electrochemistry. In addition to carrying out large assignments for major multi-national clients, NORAM and BC Research work with early-stage technology companies. They provide engineering design and fabrication support, sharing their experience in technology commercialization, and growing with companies as a strategic partner.

Certain information contained herein may constitute forward-looking information under Canadian securities legislation. Forward-looking information includes, but is not limited to, the execution of the Companys plans which are contingent on the receipt of grant monies and the commercialization of the Companys technology and patents. Generally, forward-looking information can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as 'believe', 'expect', 'anticipate', 'plan', 'intend', 'continue', 'estimate', 'may', 'will', 'should', 'ongoing', or variations of such words and phrases or statements that certain actions, events or results will occur. Forward-looking statements are based on the opinions and estimates of management as of the date such statements are made and they are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, level of activity, performance or achievements of the Company to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements or forward-looking information, including: the ability of the Company to obtain additional financing; including the receipt of grant monies from SDTC, ASIP, NRC-IRAP and the receipt of all necessary regulatory approvals. Although management of the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking statements or forward-looking information, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements and forward-looking information. The Company does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements or forward-looking information that is incorporated by reference herein, except as required by applicable securities laws.

NEITHER THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATION SERVICES PROVIDER (AS THAT TERM IS DEFINED IN THE POLICIES OF THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE) ACCEPTS RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS NEWS RELEASE

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Nano One Enhances Pilot Productivity and Files a New Patent - GlobeNewswire (press release)

Flexible Devices Drive New IoT Apps – SemiEngineering

Printed and flexible electronics are becoming almost synonymous with many emerging applications in the IoT, and as the technologies progress so do the markets that rely on those technologies.

Flexible sensors factor into a number of IoT use cases such as agriculture, health care, and structural health monitoring. Other types of flexible devices are essential to the IoT, especially in wearable gadgets, such as fitness bands and smartwatches.

BeBop Sensors of Berkeley, Calif., is a case in point. The company supplies smart fabrics to develop flexible pressure sensors for OEMs. BeBops sensors go into bicycle helmets, car seats, data gloves, shoes, Spandex clothing, and steering wheels, among other products. The smart fabric sensors were originally developed for musical instruments by BeBop founder Keith McMillen for his older company, Keith McMillen Instruments, tying instruments to computers and software.

Fig. 1: Modular data glove. Source: BeBop Sensors

IDTechEx forecasts the world market for printed, flexible, and organic electronics will increase from $29.28 billion this year to $73.43 billion in 2027. Most of that revenue comes from organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) going into displays, lighting, and televisions, along with conductive inks. Emerging applications are stretchable electronics, logic and memory devices, and thin-film sensors, according to the market research firm.

Fig. 2: 10-year forecast for flexible electronics. Source: IDTechEx.

Stretchable electronics alone will develop into a $600 million market in the next decade, IDTechEx Research predicts. And MarketsandMarkets has forecast that the components market for flexible electronics will be worth $13.23 billion by 2020.

Anwar Mohammed, a senior director in Flexs Advanced Engineering Group, was among the keynote speakers at the recent 2017FLEX conference in Monterey, Calif. He spoke about flexible hybrid electronics (mixing printed and CMOS-based components), printed conductors, and stretchable circuits made with roll-to-roll printing, among other topics. So many wonderful things are being created today, like printed memory, printed transistors, printed pressure sensors, printed sweat sensors, he said.

Conductive yarn could go into embroidering clothing and outerwear, he noted. Flexible electronics also could incorporate antibacterial technology, he added. This technology can be both hydrophobic and oleophobic.

Mohammed called for the development of industry standards in flexible electronics. Its basically a nascent area, he said. He would like to see the development of printable batteries that could be printed onto fabric for smart clothing, such as jackets.

Jason Marsh, director of technology at NextFlex, said his consortium is working to de-risk innovation in FHE, bringing together academia, companies, governments, and not-for-profit institutions. NextFlex has some 25 projects under way, backed with $40 million in funding. The consortium coordinates with IPC, the trade association that develops and maintains standards for electronic assemblies and packaging.

NextFlex is working with SEMI and the Nano-Bio Manufacturing Consortium on flexible and printed battery research and development, according to Marsh. On another front, the consortium is collaborating with Advanced Functional Fabrics of America and the University of Massachusetts at Lowell on a fabric study center.

David Wiens, a product marketing manager at Mentor, a Siemens Business, discussed how his electronic design automation company is addressing FHE design. Mentor has leveraged its printed circuit board design tools for designing flexible hybrid electronics. Its approach is to optimize design flow from concept to manufacturing, he said, representing a 3D design and modeling paradigm.

Flexible hybrid electronics are like printed circuit boards and IC packaging, Wiens noted. Lessons learned in the 1980s from hybrid chips and multichip modules are relevant today for FHE. Electronic design automation can enable early adoption of FHE technology, he added.

Mentor can help optimize IC I/O for FHE via RDL (redistribution layer process technology), Wiens said.

Better health E-health, telemedicine, and wireless sensor networks are another growth opportunity for flexible sensors.

Two billion people cannot access a health-care system, said David Bordonada, a key account manager at Libelium, with responsibilities in the IoT, cooking hacks, and channel sales. He previously promoted use of Libeliums Waspmote sensor platform by educational institutions.

Telemedicine, conducting medical diagnoses and other interactions with patients over the Internet, promises to help people with home monitoring and self-monitoring of medical conditions without having to travel to a doctors office, a clinic, or a hospital. Employing telemedicine technology could save billions of dollars on public health services, according to the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Australia.

By employing wireless sensor networks and cloud-based computing services, significant cost reductions can be realized in health care, Bordonada said. Low-cost sensors can be used for early detection of childhood diseases, he noted. Libelium has been active in helping to reduce childbirth deaths of mothers in the Dominican Republic.

Better tomatoes Francis Gouillart, president of the Experience Co-Creation Partnership, described the work with Analog Devices and ripe.io in the Internet of Tomatoes project, which uses flexible hybrid sensors to track tomatoes through the processes of planting seeds, tending to the plants, monitoring the ripeness of the fruits, and transporting the harvested tomatoes through the food supply chain. Ripe.io provides blockchain technology for agriculture and food.

Fig. 3: The Internet of Tomatoes. Source: Analog Devices

Environmental sensors are used at the tomato farm, along with temperature and humidity sensors, according to Gouillart. Once tomatoes are picked, optical non-destructive sensors can keep an eye on their conditions.

Forty percent of tomatoes are wasted in growing, transportation, and handling, he said.

Under the federal Food Safety Modernization Act, buyers can speed up their regulatory reporting to the government. Blockchain can play a role, Gouillart said. Small farms can benefit from precision agriculture. Locavores can keep tabs on how many miles tomatoes are transported, bolstering the eat local culinary movement. There are also considerations in modeling ripeness and predicting taste through sensor technology. De-commoditizing food is the ultimate goal, he asserted.

Gouillart outlined 10 issues confronting the agriculture and food industry, discussing how sensor technology can resolve some of those issues.

He also serves as CEO of Stock Pot Malden, a shared-kitchen incubator for food trucks and food-product entrepreneurs working on a healthy, sustainable agriculture/food chain in the metropolitan Boston area.

Better everything OE-A, an international association for printed and large-area flexible electronicsa working group within the Verband Deutscher Maschinen- und Anlagenbau (VDMA)just released the seventh edition of its Roadmap for Organic and Printed Electronics in March. Stan Farnsworth, chief marketing officer of NovaCentrix and a member of OE-A, noted that Audis 2017 TT incorporates an OLED production bumper assembly. It is the first vehicle to use that technology, Farnsworth noted.

Curved OLED displays are becoming common in smartphones, smartwatches, and televisions, he said. Printed batteries and supercapacitors are emerging, he added. Unlike the U.S., the European Union places no battery restrictions on the use of supercapacitors. Integrated smart systems are being developed for the IoT, wearables, health, and well-being applications, he said.

Technology has enabled the development of fully printed radio-frequency identification and near-field communication labels, Farnsworth said. OLEDs, long touted for their longer lifetimes, are also improving in luminosity. He added that the key parameters for organic and printed electronics, going forward, are standards, cost, capital expenditures, and reliability.

Brewer Science of Rolla, Missouri, is involved in advanced lithography, wafer-level packaging materials, and printed electronics. It offers the InFlect line of sensors, which use conductive carbon junctions for detecting external stimuli. Brewer has a flexible (bending) sensor, along with devices for sensing moisture and temperature.

The Internet of Things is extremely broad in terms of its scope, said Dominic Miranda, Brewers business development manager for printed electronics. Printed and flexible electronics are flexible, literally and figuratively, for IoT applications, he added. Wearables represent a new wave of IoT, requiring flexible substrates, he said.

Fig. 4: Flexible sensor. Source: Brewer Science.

These printed and flexible sensors can be deployed in large arrays at reasonable costs, made with roll-to-roll manufacturing equipment, according to Miranda.

We move up into the area where you start talking about the Internet of People, really, Miranda said. You can have these types of sensors, or any type of printed sensors like this, in clothing, or personal devices, wearable devices, which would pretty much mean ubiquitous sensing capabilities and potentially trillions of devices in the market that have various capabilities.

Moisture sensors can be used in precision agriculture, where soil moisture is more critical for growing grapes than for growing corn, according to Miranda. Large sensor arrays for the IoT can present a really powerful tool for wineries, he said.

Roll-to-roll processing of IoT sensors is an advantage, not a critical factor, in lowering sensor costs, Miranda said.

Brewers printed sensors are relatively simple, at least in terms of their construction, Miranda said. These arent highly complex sensors. They are technologically advanced, but they arent highly complex. When you start looking at some of the things that were working on in the future, theres a lot more complexity in terms of the printing and things were doing in the system architecture of the arrays, or the sensors. Were getting into more and more complex and diversified sensor capabilities that we hope to see in the very near future, in a year or so.

Brewer Science is looking forward to the development of pH sensors, water analyte sensors, and hydrogen gas sensors, among other products.

The IoT and PFE have a long road of research and development ahead for these technologies.

Related Stories Materials For Future Electronics Flexible electronics, new memory types, and neuromorphic computing dominate research. Progress In Flexible Electronics Hybrid approach pairs very thin silicon with printed interconnects and sensors. Flexible Sensors Begin Ramping Technology opens up new possibilities for the Internet of Everything.

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Flexible Devices Drive New IoT Apps - SemiEngineering

Technique enables printable and rewritable color images – Phys.org – Phys.Org

August 1, 2017 These structural colors were printed on the same sheet of paper coated with copolymers through the application of ammonium persulfate and ethanol. Hydrogen bromide was used to neutralize the solvents and create a blank paper on which to print again. Credit: Rice University

A chemical process that allows color images to be printed on specially coated paper and then erased so that different images can be printed on the same paper has been developed by researchers at Rice, Yonsei and Korea universities.

The researchers explain the technique in a paper that will be published in the Aug. 4 issue of the journal Advanced Materials, which will feature images printed with this process on the cover.

The technique makes use of structural colors, which have different properties than the ink dyes used for standard printing. The standard dyes absorb all the colors of the spectrum except for the color that is visible to the eye, such as red or blue, and the colors fade over time. Structural colors are determined by the selective reflections of certain colors at certain angles. They're made from one-dimensional stacks of layered polymers, called block copolymers.

"Copolymers are soft, stretchable and deformable," said Ned Thomas, Rice's Ernest Dell Butcher Professor of Engineering and professor of materials science and nanoengineering, of chemical and biomolecular engineering and of chemistry. "You can swell or shrink them and change their shape and dimensions, which will affect which color they reflect."

Thomas said one of his former Ph.D. students at MIT, Cheolmin Park, who is now a professor at Yonsei University, wanted to collaborate on developing printable and rewritable copolymer structural colors.

The researchers found that they could use a single, colorless, water-based ink based on ammonium persulfate (APS) to control how the copolymers cross-link in various locations, which impacts their subsequent thickness and hence the structural colors that are reflected. APS stops the swelling of the copolymers, and the thin layer reflects blue. Ethanol was used to thicken the copolymers, which reflected red. By applying varying amounts of ethanol and APS to paper that is coated with copolymers, the researchers were able to control the swelling and shrinking of the molecules and generate the colors and patterns needed to create a picture. Large amounts of APS stopped all swelling, which resulted in black images because there was no reflection.

The researchers also discovered that applying hydrogen bromide to the paper removed or erased the APS, so the reflections were neutralized, which "reset" the system so that the paper could be used again. They printed and erased images more than 50 times on the paper, with resolution similar to that of a commercial office inkjet printer.

Thomas said refinements will be needed before this technique is commercially viable. Because ethanol evaporates, the reflective patterns disappear, so the researchers are looking for a substance that is less volatile and will maintain the colors indefinitely. They also need to find an alternative to hydrogen bromide, which is toxic and not environmentally friendly.

Thomas thinks the technique has the potential to be cost-effective because it will require only one inkthe APSand a modified inkjet printer that uses paper coated with copolymers, which should cost "pennies per sheet," he said. "This could be really useful when you want to reconfigure, recolor and reshape messages on signs or clothing."

Explore further: Flexible and cost-effective fabrication of nature inspired structural colors

More information: Han Sol Kang et al, Printable and Rewritable Full Block Copolymer Structural Color, Advanced Materials (2017). DOI: 10.1002/adma.201700084

Journal reference: Advanced Materials

Provided by: Rice University

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Technique enables printable and rewritable color images - Phys.org - Phys.Org

Intel Corporation Avoids Giving Useful 10-Nano Yield Information – Madison.com

It's no secret that microprocessor giant Intel's (NASDAQ: INTC) 10nm chip manufacturing technology is very late to the market. Intel had once aimed to bring products built using this technology to market in 2016, but it now says that the volume ramp-up of such products will happen in the first half of 2018.

It's very likely that the reason that Intel has yet to bring 10nm into volume production is that its technology development organization has yet to bring the technology yield rates to satisfactory levels.

The yield rate simply refers to the percentage of manufactured chips that are salable. If a company's yield rate on a manufacturing technology is too low, then the average cost per chip goes up (since wafer costs for a given technology/product tend to be relatively fixed) and a company may simply not be able to produce enough chips to meet demand.

Getting yield rates nice and high is critical to a product ramp-up.

Intel has been silent about the yield rates and progress that it is seeing with its 10nm technology. Of course, no one would expect the company to give detailed product yield rates or defect density numbers (the average number of defects for a given area on the silicon wafer).But Intel has historically provided charts that show the yield progress of a new manufacturing technology relative to older-generation technologies. The company, however, is refusing to do even that with respect to the 10nm technology.

Let's go over what Intel has said vis-a-vis 10nm yields, and why the company is probably keeping mum on the details.

In response to a question from an analyst, Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said that the company is now providing engineering samples of its first 10nm product, code named Cannon Lake, to customers.

The executive then went on to say that the yield rates "are continuing to improve pretty much right in line with the forecasted ramp rates."

Seemingly in defense of the company's rate of progress, Krzanich then said, "It's a new technology, so you always have some problems to get solved, but we're pretty comfortable with where we're at right now."

The problem with this "information" is that the investment public doesn't really have a frame of reference to put Krzanich's claims into context.

What are Intel's "forecasted ramp rates"? Krzanich said that the company is "set to qualify the first production products right toward the end of the year" and that those products will "start to ship in the first half of next year."

We have no information on what portion of Intel's product mix is expected to transition to the 10nm technology in the first half of 2018, let alone for the entirety of 2018. The company also seems to be hinting that it could bring out its second-generation 10nm architecture, code named Ice Lake, in the second half of 2018, but that's far from confirmed.

Moreover, even if Intel plans to transition a significant amount of its product mix over to 10nm by the second half of 2018, it has yet to provide gross margin guidance for 2018 beyond a range within the "top half of [Intel's] historical range" of 55% to 65%.

Intel's yield-learning progress could be the critical factor in determining whether its gross profit margin percentage in 2018 and 2019 is closer to 65% or closer to 60%.

I suspect that Intel is unlikely to open up much more about its progress on its 10nm technology until it formally announces the products, possibly in January of 2018. Though, to be quite blunt, I think that discussion won't happen in earnest until the company's next investor meeting, which is likely to take place in February or March of 2018.

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Nanotech manufacturing conference set in Greensboro – WRAL Tech Wire

Posted Jul. 31, 2017 at 6:15 a.m.

Published: 2017-07-31 06:15:00 Updated: 2017-07-31 06:15:00

By BARRY TEATER, NCBiotech Writer

Research Triangle Park, N.C. Participants and vendors have only a few weeks left to get tiny pricing for Nano Manufacturing 2017, a conference devoted to the production of extremely small things, scheduled for Wednesday, Sept. 27, in Greensboro.

Vendors have until Aug. 31 to secure early-bird pricing of $250 a 50 percent discount for exhibition space at the conference. Other participants have until Sept. 15 to get advance price breaks $199 instead of $250 for professionals and $60 instead of $75 for students.

The fifth annual conference is expected to draw about 150 people from industry, academia, government and nonprofit organizations. The program will include a keynote speaker, four sessions, a poster session, awards and prizes, and an evening networking reception.

This conference continues to be informative and relevant to individuals and organizations looking to create new markets, accelerate R&D and understand more about advanced manufacturing techniques, particularly those involving particles at the nano scale, said Nancy Johnston, executive director of the Piedmont Triad Office of the North Carolina Biotechnology Center, a conference sponsor.

More than a dozen speakers will address issues, opportunities and challenges around innovation, startup companies, nanomanufacturing facilities and nanomanufacturing processes. Speakers will include Elizabeth Cates, vice president of R&D and materials scientist at Innegra Technologies; Steve Wilcenski, president of BN Nano; Courtney Warren, life science practice chair at Marsh & McLennan Agency's Mid-Atlantic Region; and Sandeep Dav, chief business officer at AM Technical Solutions.

"This Conference is a real opportunity for those interested in learning more about advanced manufacturing technologies and how the application of these new technologies can help grow the manufacturing sector in North Carolina and the U.S.," said Joe Magno, executive director of the North Carolina Center of Innovation Network (COIN).

The conference will be held at the Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering, an academic collaboration between North Carolina A&T State University and the University of North Carolina Greensboro. The Joint School is located on the South Campus of Gateway University Research Parkin Greensboro.

The conference provides an opportunity for the Joint School to demonstrate its unique capabilities as a statewide asset at Gateway University Research Park right here in the Piedmont Triad, said Johnston. People and place are important when facilitating industrial/academic networking and transforming communities.

The conference is organized by the Joint School, Gateway and COIN.

For more information or to register, visit the conferences registration page or contact Elie Azzi, e_azzi@uncg.edu, 336-285-2802.

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Enabling extreme performance in optics – Novus Light Technologies Today


Novus Light Technologies Today
Enabling extreme performance in optics
Novus Light Technologies Today
With the control of nano-engineering using CVD techniques, synthetic diamond can be produced in exceptionally pure form. It is this purity that places it at the heart of the many ground-breaking achievements in quantum physics that may have ...

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Enabling extreme performance in optics - Novus Light Technologies Today

New research could make dew droplets so small, they’re invisible – Phys.Org

July 31, 2017 Essentially, when the nanopillars are tall and slender, the droplets formed inside and on the crevices can jump off the surface at a much smaller size, down to two micrometers. Likewise, short and stout pillars increase the size of the droplet required to jump -- up to 20 micrometers in the case of Mulroe's experiment. Credit: Virginia Tech

By better understanding the behavior of water in its smallest form, a Virginia Tech professor and his undergraduate student could be improving the efficiency of removing condensation in a major way.

Jonathan Boreyko, an assistant professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics in the Virginia Tech College of Engineering, has been studying "jumping" dew droplets since he discovered the phenomenon in graduate school.

According to Boreyko, dew droplets only jump from water-repellent surfaces when they reach a large enough sizeabout 10 micrometersbut it was unclear why until Boreyko and his students made a breakthrough discovery, soon to be published in the high-impact journal ACS Nano.

In Boreyko's lab, then-undergraduate Megan Mulroe experimented with the surface of silicon chips to see how the nanoscopic topography of the surface might impact the jumping ability of condensation.

By creating and testing six different types of surfaces covered with so-called nanopillarsreminiscent of stalagmites on a cave floorMulroe found that the critical size of the jumping droplet can be fine-tuned based on the height, diameter, and pitch of the nanopillars.

"These results, correlated with a theoretical model, revealed that the bottleneck for jumping is how the droplets inflate inside of the surface after they first form," Boreyko said.

Essentially, when the nanopillars are tall and slender, the droplets formed inside and on the crevices can jump off the surface at a much smaller size, down to two micrometers. Likewise, short and stout pillars increase the size of the droplet required to jumpup to 20 micrometers in the case of Mulroe's experiment.

While the jumping droplets phenomena has been found to be the most efficient form of condensation removal, the ability to tweak the size of the droplets can allow for improved efficiency in removing condensation from surfaces.

"We expect that these findings will allow for maximizing the efficiency of jumping-droplet condensers, which could make power plants more efficient and enable robust anti-fogging and self-cleaning surfaces," Boreyko said. "The ultimate goal is for all dew droplets forming on a surface to jump off before they are even visible to the eye."

Mulroe, who was first author on the paper, conducted all of the experiments, while graduate student Farzad Ahmadi, who is pursuing a Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics, backed up the findings with a theoretical model.

The research will be published July 31 in ACS Nano.

Explore further: Forget defrosting your car at a glacial pace: New research speeds process up tenfold

Journal reference: ACS Nano

Provided by: Virginia Tech

Jonathan Boreyko turned on the defroster in his car one cold winter morning and waited for the ice on the windshield to melt. And kept waiting.

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NYIT Engineering Professor Is Part of Team Developing Technology … – Newswise (press release)

Newswise Fang Li, Ph.D., assistant professor of Mechanical Engineering at NYIT, is partnering with X-wave Innovations, Inc. (XII), a research and development firm specializing in the defense, homeland security, transportation, and energy fields, to develop an embedded sensor system for NASA that is capable of measuring temperature, pressure, and strain on various rocket propulsion engine components.

This technology is being developed as part of a project funded by a $125,000 NASA Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Phase I grant jointly awarded to Professor Li and XII, based in Gaithersburg, Md. In this 12-month Phase I project, Li and XII will prototype an embedded sensor system and demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed technique for passive, wireless, multi-parameter high temperature measurements. NASA needs embedded sensor systems with wireless data communication capabilities for applications including ground testing, flight testing, and in-service monitoring. This embedded sensor system will provide a highly flexible instrumentation solution to monitor remote or inaccessible measurement locations for NASA's rocket propulsion test facilities.

This project is a hybrid product of passive Surface Acoustic Wave Radio Frequency Identification (SAW- RFID) technology and high-temperature piezoelectric materials and devices. Li, who joined NYIT School of Engineering and Computing Sciences in 2012, brings expertise in high-temperature piezoelectric materials and SAW sensors to this effort. XII brings expertise in SAW-RFID technology and system integration, and a commercialization strategy to transition the developed technology into NASA programs and the commercial sector.

According to Li, cost-effective and reliable assessment of the health of propulsion engine components in harsh, high-temperature environments is challenging for conventional sensors. This sensor system she is developing with her students consists of sensor tags and a RF interrogation system. The sensor tags are embedded in measured components, powered by an incident RF signal which requires no power supply or external circuits. Being passive, they are able to work in harsh environments that would destroy conventional electronics. The RF interrogation system remotely collects data from multiple sensors and converts data into values of temperature, pressure, and strain. The maintenance free sensor system can operate for long periods, providing valuable data about the structural health and operation conditions of the engine components, Li said.

Li, together with two NYIT Mechanical Engineering graduate students, will model, design, and develop passive SAW sensors for temperature, strain and pressure measurements. Sensors are being fabricated on the NYIT-Old Westbury campus, in its class 10,000 clean room, the first of its kind in Nassau County. NYIT's clean room, part of the schools materials science and nanotechnology lab, houses a sputtering machine and microscopy tools that allow researchers to nano-engineer unique composite materials and create microchips, sensors, and implantable and wearable medical devices.

Our mission is to provide high quality education and support faculty research and student learning in high-tech focus areas, said Nada Marie Anid, Ph.D., dean, NYIT School of Engineering and Computing Sciences. This prestigious NASA grant is a perfect example of collaboration between our faculty and industry on important technological advances. It offers a tremendous growth opportunity for both Professor Li and her students in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.

Earlier this year, NASA announced its selection of 399 research and technology proposals from 277 American small businesses and 44 research institutions that will enable NASA's future missions into deep space, and advancements in aviation and science, while also benefiting the U.S. economy. Selected proposals will support the development of technologies in the areas of aeronautics, science, human exploration and operations, and space technology.

For the Phase I program, Li and XII will prototype an embedded sensor system. Phase I results will provide initial validation that the proposed technology can provide the required measurements. With a successful completion of Phase I, the program is very promising to get into Phase II, in which Li, her students, and XII will build the SAW-RFID system and demonstrate its capability to measure temperature, pressure, and strain in harsh environments.

About NYIT

NYIT (New York Institute of Technology) offers 90 degree programs, including undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees, in more than 50 fields of study, including architecture and design; arts and sciences; education; engineering and computing sciences; health professions; management; and osteopathic medicine. A non-profit independent, private institution of higher education, NYIT has 10,000 students in programs and campuses in New York (Manhattan and Old Westbury, Long Island) and Arkansas as well as China, Canada, and the United Arab Emirates. NYIT sponsors 13 NCAA Division II programs.

NYIT is guided by its mission to provide career-oriented professional education, offer access to opportunity to all qualified students, and support applications-oriented research that benefits the larger world. More than 100,000 graduates have received degrees from NYIT. For more information, visit nyit.edu.

Media Contact:

Elizabeth Sullivan Director, Media Relations libbys@nyit.edu

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NYIT Engineering Professor Is Part of Team Developing Technology ... - Newswise (press release)

Apple Officially Kills Off iPod Shuffle and Nano – Interesting Engineering

Rest in peace iPod shuffle and Nano. The websites for the MP3 players were taken down by Apple this week in the wake of the products being discontinued.

Try searching for the products in the Apple store and youll hit dead URLs. The death of these two small players follows the official end of the iconic iPod in 2014.

Apple stated, Today, we are simplifying our iPod lineup with two models of iPod touch now with double the capacity starting at just $199 and we are discontinuing the iPod shuffle and iPod nano.

[Image Source: WikimediaCommons]

You can buy the iPod touch in with 32GB and 128GB storage options. The previous iteration of the 16GB and 64GB capacities are no longer available.

If you are desperate to get your hands on the Apple products, get down to your local BestBuy or similar before they run out. The nano didnt get much attention thrown its way over the last few years. It got a small redesign in 2012 when getting upgraded to allow Bluetooth headphones and speakers. In 2015 it got a bunch of new colorways added. The clip on iPod shuffle, promoted heavily to runners, was also mainly ignored in recent history, getting its last redesign in 2010.The end of the iPod shuffle will be missed by runners and others alike who appreciated its tough design and low price.

The iPod was launched on October 23, 2001. Steve Jobs announced the new device as a way to put 1,000 songs in your pocket.The iPod went through many iterations of nano, shuffle and touch until now. When only the touch remained, smartphones have killed the need for MP3 players of any kind.

[Image Source: Matthew Yohe/Wikimedia Commons]

Music consumption has changed a lot since the birth of the iPod too. Rather than storing thousands of songs on a hard drive, people are more likely to pay for a premium music streaming service like Spotify to have any music they want at their fingertips via their smart phone.

A report from Nielsen Music reported that in 2016 streaming services provided around 38% of the music consumption market in the US. Thats around 251 billion songs. This shift to streaming services has made a huge impact on the way record companies and artists operate financially. Previously, artists would make the majority of their profits from record sales and tours were just a tool of promotion for that. Even when people stopped buying physical records, they were likely still buying the music online. A song for $1.29 on iTunes would see a chunk of that returned to the artist. In comparison a song streamed on Spotify pays the artist just $0.004891 per stream according to the website Digital Music News. This seems pretty low, but then again if you are the Candian rapper, Drake and youve been streamed more than 5.4 billion times you are doing ok.

In fact, if you are thinking of starting a music career, go with the Hip-Hop/R&B genre. Its the most commonly streamed type of music, credited with 28% of all the musicstreamed.

Sources: TheVerge,EDMsauce

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Apple Officially Kills Off iPod Shuffle and Nano - Interesting Engineering

What’s After FinFETs? – SemiEngineering

Chipmakers are readying their next-generation technologies based on 10nm and/or 7nm finFETs, but its still not clear how long the finFET will last, how long the 10nm and 7nm nodes for high-end devices will be extended, and what comes next.

The industry faces a multitude of uncertainties and challenges at 5nm, 3nm and beyond. Even today, traditional chip scaling continues to slow as process complexities and costs escalate at each node. As a result, fewer customers can afford to design chips around advanced nodes.

In theory, finFETs are expected to scale to 5nm as defined by Intel. (A fully-scaled 5nm process is roughly equivalent to 3nm from the foundries). Regardless of the confusing node names, the finFET likely will run out of steam when the fin width reaches 5nm. So at 5nm or beyond, chipmakers will need a new solution. Otherwise, traditional chip scaling will slow down or stop completely.

For some time, chipmakers have been exploring various transistor options for 5nm and beyond. So far, only Samsung has provided details. In May the company rolled out its technology roadmap, which includes a nanosheet FET for 4nm by 2020.

Other chipmakers also are leaning toward similar structures in the same timeframe, even though they have not publicly announced their intentions. Nanosheet FETs and another variant, nanowire FETs, fall into the gate-all-around category. Other variants include hexagonal FETs, nano-ring FETs and nanoslab FETs.

Fig. 1: Types of horizontal gate-all-around architectures. Source: Qualcomm, Synopsys, Applied Materials

For now, gate-all-around technology appears to be the most practical technology after finFETs. Its an evolutionary step from finFETs and shares many of the same process steps and tools. A lateral gate-all-around technology is basically a finFET on its side with a gate wrapped around it. Tiny wires or sheets serve as the channels.

There are other transistor options, as well. Some chipmakers are even looking at ways to scale using advanced packaging. Vendors are weighing the options and looking at the technical and economic merits of each. The finFET can scale one or two generations, said Mark Bohr, a senior fellow and director of process architecture and integration at Intel. But the question might be, Is one of the alternates a better option, whether its gate-all-around, III-V materials or tunnel FETs? If we had to, we could scale finFETs. But the question is, Is there a better option?

By III-V, Bohr is referring to a finFET with III-V materials in the channels, which can boost the mobility in devices. A tunnel FET (TFET) is a steep sub-threshold slope device that operates at low voltages.

While gate-all-around technology is gaining steam, it isnt the consensus pickyet. I wont necessarily say that, but its certainly getting a lot of attention, Bohr said in an interview. Its too early to predict which ones will be successful. But there are enough good ideas to ensure there will be a couple more generations.

Analysts, however, believe that 10nm/7nm finFETs will last for the foreseeable future. (FinFETs provide a) combination of higher performance, lower power consumption and lower cost, said Handel Jones, chief executive of International Business Strategies (IBS).

If next-generation transistors go into production at 5nm or beyond, the technology will be expensive and limited to specific apps. Gate-all-around is likely to be adopted, but the major benefits will be high performance, Jones said. At 5nm, it will cost $476 million to design a mainstream chip, compared to $349.2 million for 7nm and $62.9 million for 28nm, according to IBS.

Fig. 2: IC design costs. Source: IBS

To help customers get ahead of the curve, Semiconductor Engineering has taken a look at whats ahead and highlighted the difficult process steps.

Different options There are at least three main paths forwardbrute-force scaling, staying at mature nodes, and advanced packaging.

Those with deep pockets likely will continue down the traditional scaling path at 10nm/7nm and beyond. Gate-all-around is the leading contender beyond finFETs, at least for now. Longer term, there are other options, such as III-V finFETs, complementary FETs (CFETs), TFETs and vertical nanowires. Vertical nanowires involve stacking wires vertically.

A CFET is a more complex gate-all-around technology, where you are stacking nFET and pFET wires on top of each other. The current gate-all-around devices stack one type of wire, whether its nFET or pFET, on each other.

CFETs, TFETs and vertical nanowires are more revolutionary technologies and not expected in the short term. They will require new breakthroughs.

Fig. 3: Next-gen transistor architectures. Source: Imec/ISS.

So how will the high end play out? 7nm will be a long-lived node, said Gary Patton, chief technology officer at GlobalFoundries. FinFETs will have a lot of legs. There is still a lot of room to extend finFETs.

After finFETs, there are several options in R&D. For example, GlobalFoundries is exploring nanosheets, nanowires and vertical nanowires.

The decision and timing to go with one technology over another depends on technical and economic factors. You are trying to develop a process that is manufacturable and delivers a value proposition, Patton said. This stuff is not as straightforward as it used to be. There is a lot more vetting required.

In fact, a given technology might be in R&D for a decade. Then, based on a set of criteria, the best technologies appear in the market. Many others fall by the wayside when that happens.

To be sure, though, not all companies will require finFETs and nanowires. Most will stay with 22nm planar processes and above. Many cant afford finFETs, and its not required for analog, RF and other devices.

10nm, 7nm and 5nm sound attractive, said Walter Ng, vice president of business management at UMC. But how many can really afford it and justify the design and manufacturing expense? The demand pushing the bleeding-edge is really for a select few.

But even those at 22nm and above face some challenges. Everybody else needs to look at how they can continue to compete, Ng said. They are trying to find a way to differentiate and squeeze out costs.

Thats why many are drawn towards advanced packaging. All chips require an IC package. For example, customers can use traditional packages, such as flip-chip BGA. Advanced packaging extends that idea, integrating multiple die in the same package to create a high-performance system. 2.5D/3D and fan-outs are examples of this approach.

So whats the ultimate winner in the market? Theres not one answer, said David Fried, chief technology officer at Coventor. People are really looking for the application to drive the physical solution.

Fried pointed out that there is no one-size-fits-all solution. For example, finFETs or follow-on transistors make sense for high-end microprocessors. But for IoT devices, that may be an incorrect direction, he said. There is no one application that is driving the entire market. People have to stop searching for one answer that fits everything. A lot of different things can win all at the same time, but its going to be for different applications.

Meanwhile, looking into his crystal ball, Fried said: My suspicion is that 7nm looks pretty evolutionary. It will be finFET. If we see a change beyond finFET, it could be at 5nm. But remember, a lateral gate-all-around nanowire device is like a finFET with two extra etches. Going from a finFET to a lateral gate-all-around nanowire device is pretty evolutionary. I hope we start seeing that at 5nm. Beyond that, we dont have much visibility.

Transistor trends and processes Today, meanwhile, the finFET is the leading-edge transistor. In finFETs, the control of the current is accomplished by implementing a gate on each of the three sides of a fin.

A key spec is the gate-pitch. The gate-pitch for Intels 10nm finFET technology is 54nm, compared to 70nm for 14nm. (Intels 10nm is the equivalent to 7nm from the foundries.)

The big decision comes when the gate-pitch approaches 40nm. Based on simulations from Imec, the finFET begins to teeter at a 42nm gate-pitch. The nanowire will scale below that and still have good electrostatic control, said An Steegen, executive vice president of semiconductor technology and systems at Imec. The nanowire FET, according to Imec, has demonstrated good electrostatic control at a 36nm gate pitch. Imec has also devised a nanowire down to 9nm in diameter.

Fig. 4: Imecs tiny nanowire. Source: Imec

In general, gate-all-around provides a performance boost over finFETs, but there are several challenges, namely drive current and parasitic capacitance. Compounding the issues is a relativity new layer called the middle-of-line (MOL). The MOL connects the separate transistor and interconnect pieces using a series of contact structures. In the MOL, parasitic capacitance is problematic. It creates external resistance in various parts of the device. This includes the contact to the junction, where the low-resistance Schottky barrier and the silicide resides.

One version, a lateral nanowire FET, is where you take a finFET and chop it into pieces. Each piece becomes a tiny horizontal nanowire, which serves as the channel between a source and drain.

Nanosheet or nanoslab FETs are the other common variants. Both technologies resemble a lateral nanowire FET, but the wires are much wider and thicker.

Each version has some tradesoffs. (The nanosheet FET) is not quite as revolutionary as they might want it to sound, Intels Bohr said. Its just finFETs laid on their sides. Not sure if the value is quite as strong as nanowires.

In nanowire FETs, the gate surrounds the entire wire, enabling more control of the gate. Its this improved gate control that enables you to continue to scale the gate length, said Mike Chudzik, senior director of the Transistor and Interconnect Group at Applied Materials.

As stated above, a finFET is cut into pieces. As a result, the amount of surface area on the device decreases. You are losing that real estate of silicon, Chudzik said. Im sure you are gaining in off-current, but you are losing in overall drive current.

Thats why a nanosheet FET makes sense. Thats where you start to elongate these wires, he explained. You are gaining in volume for your drive current. In addition, you can also play tricks with the shapes of these wires or sheets to help reduce the capacitance.

Another version, the nano-ring FET, has a similar benefit. The whole idea of the nano-ring is to actually squeeze the sheets together a little bit, he said. What that does is effectively reduce the capacitance.

The first gate-all-around devices will likely have three wires. Over time, though, chipmakers will need to stack more wires on top of each other to provide more performance. We certainly dont want to introduce new device architectures that last only a node. (So the idea) is to consider stacking more nanoslabs on top of each other, he said. But you cant just keep infinitely stacking channels, because you get a lot of the same parasitic, capacitance and resistance problems as you do with taller finFETs.

In a sign of things to come, GlobalFoundries, IBM and Samsung recently presented a paper on a nanosheet FET for 5nm and 3nm. The technology is said to show better performance with a smaller footprint than finFETs.

Fig. 5: Cross-section simulation of (a) finFET, (b) nanowire, and (c) nanosheet. Source: IBM.

Using extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography for some layers, the nanosheet FET from the three companies has three sheets or wires. It has a gate length of 12nm and a 44nm/48nm contacted poly pitch with 5nm silicon channels. The nFET has a sub-threshold slope of 75mV/decade, while the pFET is 85mV/decade, according to the paper.

In the lab, researchers stacked nanosheets with three layers of 5nm sheet thickness and a 10nm space between them. They demonstrated inverter and SRAM layouts using single stack nanosheet structures with sheet widths from 15nm to 45nm. It has superior electrostatics and dynamic performance compared to extremely scaled finFETs with multiple threshold and isolation solutions inherited from finFET technologies. All these advantages make stacked nanosheet devices an attractive solution as a replacement of finFETs, scalable to the 5nm device node and beyond, and with less complexity in the patterning strategy, according to the paper.

Fig. 6: Stacked nanosheet process sequence and TEM. Source: IBM, Samsung, GlobalFoundries.

Generally, the process steps are similar between gate-all-around and finFETs, with some exceptions. Making a gate-all-around is challenging, however. Patterning, defect control and variability are just some of the issues.

The first step in gate-all-around differs from a finFET. In gate-all-around, the goal is to make a super-lattice structure on a substrate using an epitaxial reactor. The super-lattice consists of alternating layers of silicon-germanium (SiGe) and silicon. Ideally, a stack would consist of three layers of SiGe and three layers of silicon.

Then, like a finFET flow, the next step involves the formation of the shallow trench isolation structure. Its critical that the super-lattice has ultra-abrupt junctions between silicon germanium and silicon, Applieds Chudzik said.

Here comes the next critical step. In gate-all-around, the gate not only wraps around the channel, but it will wrap around some of the contact area. This adds capacitance to the mix. So you need to form whats called an inner spacer, where you actually separate the high-k from the source-drain region. That can be done with an ALD-type film, Chudzik said.

Then, using a replacement process, the SiGe layers are removed in the super-lattice structure. This, in turn, leaves the silicon layers with a space between them. Each silicon layer forms the basis of a nanowire.

Finally, high-k/metal-gate materials are deposited, thereby forming a gate. In effect, the gate surrounds each of the nanowires.

Mask/litho challenges Along the way, there are also a series of lithography steps. At 16nm/14nm and 10nm/7nm, chipmakers are using todays 193nm immersion lithography tools and multiple patterning.

At 7nm and/or 5nm, the industry hopes to insert EUV. In EUV, a power source converts plasma into light at 13.5nm wavelengths, enabling finer features on a chip.

Chipmakers hope to insert EUV for the most difficult parts, namely metal1 and vias. They will continue to use traditional lithography for many other steps.

EUV can reduce the cost per layer by 9% for the metal lines and 28% for vias, compared to triple patterning, according to ASML. (EUV) eliminates steps in the fab, said Michael Lercel, director of product marketing at ASML. If you look at the cost of doing multiple immersion lithography steps, coupled with the other process steps, such as cleaning and metrology, we believe that EUV is less costly per layer versus triple patterning immersion and certainly quadruple patterning and beyond.

EUV isnt ready for production, however. ASML is readying its latest EUV scannerthe NXE:3400B. Initially, the tool will ship with a 140-watt source, enabling a throughput of 100 wafers per hour (wph).

To put EUV in production, chipmakers want 250 watts, enabling 125 wph. Recently, though, ASML has developed a 250-watt source, which will be shipped early next year.

EUV resists, meanwhile, are another stumbling block. To reach the desired throughput for EUV, the industry wants EUV resists at a dose of 20mJ/cm. Good imaging seems to be more towards the 30mJ/cm to 40mJ/cm range today, said Richard Wise, technical managing director at Lam Research. So the dose is not necessarily where we would like it to be.

With a 30mJ/cm dose, for example, an EUV scanner with a 250-watt source produces 90 wph, which is below the desired 125 wph target, according to analysts.

But developing resists at the desired dose is challenging. There are a lot of fundamental physical challenges to lower that dose because of the stochastic effects in EUV, Wise said.

This involves a phenomenon called photon shot noise. A photon is a fundamental particle of light. Variations in the number of photons can impact EUV resists during the patterning process. It can cause unwanted line-edge roughness (LER), which is defined as a deviation of a feature edge from an ideal shape.

While the industry is wrestling with the resists, photomask makers are developing EUV masks. Todays optical mask consists of an opaque layer of chrome on a glass substrate. In contrast, an EUV mask is a reflective technology, which consists of alternating layers of silicon and molybdenum on a substrate.

We need EUV in order to avoid triple patterning, said Aki Fujimura, chief executive of D2S. This means that EUV masks will have a lot more main features than ArF masks, and that each of these features will be small. Since EUV more accurately reflects mask aberrations on the wafer, EUV masks need to print more of the smaller things and each more accurately.

To make EUV masks, photomask manufacturers will require some new tools. For example, they want faster e-beam mask writers. As mask features become more complex, todays single-beam e-beam tools take a longer time to pattern or write a mask. Todays e-beams are based on variable shape beam (VSB) technology.

The solution is multi-beam mask writers. Today, IMS is shipping a multi-beam mask writer for both optical and EUV masks, while NuFlare is also developing multi-beam tools.

Multi-beam will help with mask yields, turnaround times and cost. Most masks in the world will still be perfectly fine with VSB writers, Fujimura said. But the critical few will need multi-beam writing to keep the write times reasonable.

In the most likely scenario that EUV is ready for 5nm, the demand for multi-beam writing will be high for some mask layers. For example, if a mask layer contains a large number of non-orthogonal, non-45-degree features, multi-beam will be required for sure. 193i is blind to small perturbations on the mask, so Manhattanization of those patterns work fine with relatively large stepping sizes, he said. However, EUV can see much better, and that will hugely increase the shot count, making VSB writing unlikely. But these are very specialized masks for specialized chips. For the majority of mask layers, even though the number of main features on the mask will explode by factors, the number of shots needed to shoot the decorations and SRAFs will decrease substantially. An advanced VSB writer with sufficient precision may be fine for a majority of EUV masks.

Inspection/metrology challenges Inspection and metrology are also critical at 5nm and beyond. The trend toward vertical architectures introduces the challenge of buried defects for inspection and complex profiles for metrology, said Neeraj Khanna, senior director of customer engagement at KLA-Tencor. EUV will experience high-volume adoption at these nodes, driving new random and systematic defect mechanisms. Stochastic issues will drive a need for higher sampling.

What does this all mean? We expect these new architectures to drive new sets of requirements for metrology and inspection, Khanna said. The industry has to continue to innovate and extend core technologies.

Related Stories Uncertainty Grows For 5nm, 3nm What Transistors Will Look Like At 5nm Shrink Or Package? Making 2.5D, Fan-Outs Cheaper Whats Next In Scaling, Stacking

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What's After FinFETs? - SemiEngineering

Once upon a time, the iPod Nano was AMAZING – Fast Company

In just a few short hours, the keys to the car industry's future will be handed over to the 30 customers who were first in line to buy Tesla's new Model 3. The car is Tesla's first foray into affordability, with the initial price point starting atabout half the cost of Tesla's previous models, or around $35,000althoughwith an expected $7,500 U.S. tax credit, that price falls to $27,500.Tesla boss Elon Musk has made a few announcements about the new compact car that will seat five adults,but he may have a few surprises up his sleeve. Here are three things to watch for when the Tesla 3 launches tonight:

1. Autopilot

Model 3s will come with the hardware for AutopilotTesla's partially self-driving systemalready installed in its cars, but it's unclear when that feature will be fully functional and which features customers will have to pony up additional funds for. As Bloomberg notes, Musk has hinted that some of the most exciting self-driving features, like automatic lane changing, would be available around the time that the Model 3 was ready for launch (aka now).

2. Impressive Efficiency

Some sleuths over at Electrek think they've found the average efficiency of Tesla's vehicles buried in its website coding237 Wh per mile, which would make the Model 3 extremely efficient if not one of the most efficient electric vehicles in the U.S.The car has a range of 215 miles (346 kms) on a charge.

3. New Model S and Model X

Bloomberg thinks that Tesla might not only unveil its Model 3, but also roll out updated versions of its Model S and Model X cars. Adding new features to their more expensive models is away for the company to make sure potential buyers are still drawn to their ultra-luxury cars.

ML

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Once upon a time, the iPod Nano was AMAZING - Fast Company

Heavy Metals in Water Meet Their Match – Texas Medical Center (press release)

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Heavy Metals in Water Meet Their Match - Texas Medical Center (press release)

Introducing the First Biocompatible Ion Current Battery – ENGINEERING.com

Diagram of the inverted battery. (Image courtesy of the University of Maryland.)

In our bodies, flowing ions (sodium, potassium and other electrolytes) are the electrical signals that power the brain and control the rhythm of the heart, the movement of muscles and much more.

The new UMD battery moves electrons around in the device to deliver energy in the form of a flow of ions. This is the first time that an ionic current-generating battery has been invented.

"My intention is for ionic systems to interface with human systems," said Liangbing Hu, the head of the group that developed that battery. Hu is a professor of materials science at the University of Maryland, College Park. He is also a a principal investigator of the Nanostructures for Electrical Energy Storage Energy Frontier Research Center, sponsored by the Department of Energy, which funded the study.

"So I came up with the reverse design of a battery," Hu said. "In a typical battery, electrons flow through wires to interface electronics, and ions flow through the battery separator. In our reverse design, a traditional battery is electronically shorted. Then ions have to flow through the outside ionic cables. In this case, the ions in the ionic cablehere, grass fiberscan interface with living systems."

The work of Hu and his colleagues was published inNature Communications.

"Potential applications might include the development of the next generation of devices to micro-manipulate neuronal activities and interactions that can prevent and/or treat such medical problems as Alzheimer's disease and depression," said group member Jianhua Zhang, PhD, a staff scientist at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK).

"The battery could be used to develop medical devices for the disabled, or for more efficient drug and gene delivery tools in both research and clinical settings, as a way to more precisely treat cancers and other medical diseases, said Zhang, who performed biological experiments to test that the new battery successfully transmitted current to living cells..

"Looking far ahead on the scientific horizon, one hopes also that this invention may help to establish the possibility of direct machine and human communication," he said.

Because living cells work on ionic current and existing batteries provide an electronic current, scientists have previously tried to figure out how to create biocompatibility between these two by patching an electronic current into an ionic current.

The problem with this approach is that electronic current needs to reach a certain voltage to jump the gap between electronic systems and ionic systems. However, in living systems ionic currents flow at a very low voltage.

Thus, with an electronic-to-ionic patch the induced current would be too high to run, say, a brain or a muscle. This problem could be eliminated by using ionic current batteries, which could be run at any voltage.

The new UMD battery also has another unusual feature: it uses grass to store its energy. To make the battery, the team soaked blades of Kentucky bluegrass in lithium salt solution. The channels that once moved nutrients up and down the grass blade were ideal conduits to hold the solution.

The demonstration battery the research team created looks like two glass tubes with a blade of grass inside, each connected by a thin metal wire at the top. The wire is where the electrons flow through to move from one end of the battery to the other as the stored energy slowly discharges. At the other end of each glass tube is a metal tip through which the ionic current flows.

The researchers proved that the ionic current is flowing by touching the ends of the battery to either end of a lithium-soaked cotton string, with a dot of blue-dyed copper ions in the middle. Caught up in the ionic current, the copper moved along the string toward the negatively charged pole, just as the researchers predicted.

Grass microchannels inside the inverted battery. (Image courtesy of University of Maryland.)

However, the team plans to diversify the types of ionic current electron batteries they can produce. "We are developing multiple ionic conductors with cellulose, hydrogels and polymers," said Wang.

This is not the first time UMD scientists have tested natural materials in new uses. Hu and his team previously have been studying cellulose and plant materials for electronic batteries, creating a battery and a supercapacitor out of wood and a battery from a leaf. They also have created transparent wood as a potentially more energy-efficient replacement for glass windows.

Ping Liu, an associate professor in nanoengineering at the University of California, San Diego, who was not involved with the study, said: "The work is very creative and its main value is in delivering ionic flow to bio systems without posing other dangers to them. Eventually, the impact of the work really resides in whether smaller and more biocompatible junction materials can be found that then interface with cells and organisms more directly and efficiently."

For more battery news, check out this article on Super Batteries Made from Recycled Glass.

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Introducing the First Biocompatible Ion Current Battery - ENGINEERING.com

Engineering a solution to dirty water – Phys.Org

July 27, 2017 by Allie Nicodemo Jianfeng Sun and Ran Ran, both PhD'17, work on a new water filtration model inside the Nano & Micro Biomechanical Characterization and Testing Laboratory in the Forsyth Building at Northeastern University on July 25, 2017. Credit: Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

More than 844 million people around the globe lack access to clean water. One of the challenges is that bacteria from rivers can flow into groundwater sources, polluting what may have been potable drinking water. Building new infrastructure to reroute clean water is expensive, especially for regions that already struggle with extreme poverty. Instead, communities often rely on water filtration systems.

Current methods of testing water safety can be expensive and time consuming. Researchers must first take samples at the water source and bring them back to the lab. Then they have to test the samples to determine which types of bacteria are present.

"It usually takes hours or days, and to process the data and get results takes another few hours," says Jianfeng Sun, a doctoral student in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Northeastern University. Working with fellow doctoral student Ran Ran and undergraduate student Derek Tran, Sun is developing a new method that's faster, easier to use, and portable.

The group presented the research at the 2017 Society of Engineering Conference, hosted at Northeastern this month. Researchers and students at the conference hail from disciplines across the engineering and science spectrum. "Their work addresses a wide range of issues including energy for sustainability, sensing and control for security, and bio-nanotechnology for healthcare," said Hanchen Huang, Donald W. Smith Professor and chair of the Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering.

Traditionally, in order for scientists to measure what types of bacteria are present in water, they push the water sample through a column of soil or sand that's native to the riverbed where the sample came from. As the water goes through the column, some bacteria gets pushed through as well, but some gets left behind. That "sticky" bacteria adhere to the surface of sand or soil particles.

That means that some types of bacteria in rivers aren't a concern. They won't pollute groundwater because they won't ever reach it, instead getting stuck in the sand or soil of the riverbed.

However, researchers find that some bacteria will squeeze through the soil column and make it to the other side. That non-sticky stuff can be problematic. Since it's not adhering to the soil or sand, it may hitch a ride on the river current all the way into a town's source of drinking water and make people sick.

While the traditional strategy for measuring bacteria works, Sun knew he could make it more efficient. Instead of using a soil column to push water samples through, his method uses a microchannel.

If you imagine scraping a tiny ditch down the middle of a glass microscope slide, this is the microchannel where water from a sample flows. The flow is very gentle, allowing sticky bacteria to adhere to the edge of the channel. The slide is positioned over a microscope that counts individual bacteria to see which become trapped and which get flushed through.

To make this system portable, Sun knew he wanted the microscope to be able to connect with a cellphone. But there weren't any good options available. Instead of trying to retrofit his system with an existing device, he and Ran built a new microscope from scratch.

Eventually, Sun wants to develop a mobile application that will count and analyze bacteria the microscope sees. That way, researchers could bring the device into the field and test samples on the fly, cutting down on the time it takes to process data in the lab. This translates to more efficient water filtration, which has the potential to save lives all over the world.

Explore further: E. coli bacteria found in drinking water at US Open

Health officials say E. coli bacteria have been found in a drinking water station at Erin Hills golf course where the U.S. Open is underway, but there have been no reports of illness.

The lack of clean water in many areas around the world is a persistent, major public health problem. One day, tiny robots could help address this issue by zooming around contaminated water and cleaning up disease-causing ...

A University of British Columbia-developed system that uses bacteria to turn non-potable water into drinking water will be tested next week in West Vancouver prior to being installed in remote communities in Canada and beyond.

Researchers from Lund University in Sweden have discovered that our drinking water is to a large extent purified by millions of "good bacteria" found in water pipes and purification plants. So far, the knowledge about them ...

What can the forests of Scandinavia possibly offer to migrants in faraway refugee camps? Clean water may be one thing.

Research at the University of Sheffield, published in the latest issue of Water Science and Technology: Water Supply, points the way to more sophisticated and targeted methods of ensuring our drinking water remains safe to ...

If climate change is not curbed, increased precipitation could substantially overload U.S. waterways with excess nitrogen, according to a new study from Carnegie's Eva Sinha and Anna Michalak and Princeton University's Venkatramani ...

Biochar from recycled waste may both enhance crop growth and save health costs by helping clear the air of pollutants, according to Rice University researchers.

Britain said Wednesday it will outlaw the sale of new diesel and petrol cars and vans from 2040 in a bid to cut air pollution but environmental groups said the proposals did not go far enough.

A new study projects that if climate change continues unabated, heat-related deaths will rise dramatically in 10 major U.S. metropolitan areas compared to if the predicted increase in global warming is substantially curbed ...

Hydrogen at elevated temperature creates high electrical conductivity in the Earth's mantle.

The idea of geoengineering, also known as climate engineering, is very controversial. But as greenhouse gases continue to accumulate in our atmosphere, scientists are beginning to look at possible emergency measures.

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Engineering a solution to dirty water - Phys.Org

NYIT Engineering Professor Is Part of Team Developing Technology for NASA – Newswise (press release)

Newswise Fang Li, Ph.D., assistant professor of Mechanical Engineering at NYIT, is partnering with X-wave Innovations, Inc. (XII), a research and development firm specializing in the defense, homeland security, transportation, and energy fields, to develop an embedded sensor system for NASA that is capable of measuring temperature, pressure, and strain on various rocket propulsion engine components.

This technology is being developed as part of a project funded by a $125,000 NASA Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Phase I grant jointly awarded to Professor Li and XII, based in Gaithersburg, Md. In this 12-month Phase I project, Li and XII will prototype an embedded sensor system and demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed technique for passive, wireless, multi-parameter high temperature measurements. NASA needs embedded sensor systems with wireless data communication capabilities for applications including ground testing, flight testing, and in-service monitoring. This embedded sensor system will provide a highly flexible instrumentation solution to monitor remote or inaccessible measurement locations for NASA's rocket propulsion test facilities.

This project is a hybrid product of passive Surface Acoustic Wave Radio Frequency Identification (SAW- RFID) technology and high-temperature piezoelectric materials and devices. Li, who joined NYIT School of Engineering and Computing Sciences in 2012, brings expertise in high-temperature piezoelectric materials and SAW sensors to this effort. XII brings expertise in SAW-RFID technology and system integration, and a commercialization strategy to transition the developed technology into NASA programs and the commercial sector.

According to Li, cost-effective and reliable assessment of the health of propulsion engine components in harsh, high-temperature environments is challenging for conventional sensors. This sensor system she is developing with her students consists of sensor tags and a RF interrogation system. The sensor tags are embedded in measured components, powered by an incident RF signal which requires no power supply or external circuits. Being passive, they are able to work in harsh environments that would destroy conventional electronics. The RF interrogation system remotely collects data from multiple sensors and converts data into values of temperature, pressure, and strain. The maintenance free sensor system can operate for long periods, providing valuable data about the structural health and operation conditions of the engine components, Li said.

Li, together with two NYIT Mechanical Engineering graduate students, will model, design, and develop passive SAW sensors for temperature, strain and pressure measurements. Sensors are being fabricated on the NYIT-Old Westbury campus, in its class 10,000 clean room, the first of its kind in Nassau County. NYIT's clean room, part of the schools materials science and nanotechnology lab, houses a sputtering machine and microscopy tools that allow researchers to nano-engineer unique composite materials and create microchips, sensors, and implantable and wearable medical devices.

Our mission is to provide high quality education and support faculty research and student learning in high-tech focus areas, said Nada Marie Anid, Ph.D., dean, NYIT School of Engineering and Computing Sciences. This prestigious NASA grant is a perfect example of collaboration between our faculty and industry on important technological advances. It offers a tremendous growth opportunity for both Professor Li and her students in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.

Earlier this year, NASA announced its selection of 399 research and technology proposals from 277 American small businesses and 44 research institutions that will enable NASA's future missions into deep space, and advancements in aviation and science, while also benefiting the U.S. economy. Selected proposals will support the development of technologies in the areas of aeronautics, science, human exploration and operations, and space technology.

For the Phase I program, Li and XII will prototype an embedded sensor system. Phase I results will provide initial validation that the proposed technology can provide the required measurements. With a successful completion of Phase I, the program is very promising to get into Phase II, in which Li, her students, and XII will build the SAW-RFID system and demonstrate its capability to measure temperature, pressure, and strain in harsh environments.

About NYIT

NYIT (New York Institute of Technology) offers 90 degree programs, including undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees, in more than 50 fields of study, including architecture and design; arts and sciences; education; engineering and computing sciences; health professions; management; and osteopathic medicine. A non-profit independent, private institution of higher education, NYIT has 10,000 students in programs and campuses in New York (Manhattan and Old Westbury, Long Island) and Arkansas as well as China, Canada, and the United Arab Emirates. NYIT sponsors 13 NCAA Division II programs.

NYIT is guided by its mission to provide career-oriented professional education, offer access to opportunity to all qualified students, and support applications-oriented research that benefits the larger world. More than 100,000 graduates have received degrees from NYIT. For more information, visit nyit.edu.

Media Contact:

Elizabeth Sullivan Director, Media Relations libbys@nyit.edu

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NYIT Engineering Professor Is Part of Team Developing Technology for NASA - Newswise (press release)

UTSA professors engineering tougher security measures for implantable technology – FOX 29

by Zack Hedrick, Fox San Antonio

It's a story that has a lot of people talking.

A Wisconsin company is offering its employees microchip implants, which allows them access throughout their office building.

Researchers at UTSA right now are working on ways to make this technology better protected.

As microchips have gotten smaller speed and capacity have increased.

Dr. Ethan Ahn is a professor of micro and nano-technology at UTSA.

Now a new and controversial piece of technology is raising some concerns.

While working on making technology smaller. Dr. Ahn and his colleagues at UTSA are also developing ways to improve security for implantable technology.

I believe they should have their own storage device in there rather than using the cloud," said Ahn.

The microchip being used by the company in Wisconsin is about the size of a grain of rice.

It's placed in between your thumb and index finger.

Using radio frequency identification, or FRID, it can help log into computers, give access to doors you can even use it to buy something at the vending machine

Despite its size the microchip can also store financial and medical information.

The company says the technology is encrypted.

But tech experts like Dr. Ahn say there are different levels of encryption and encryption doesnt guarantee the security of information on the device.

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UTSA professors engineering tougher security measures for implantable technology - FOX 29

Novel RNA nanodevices in living cells can sense and analyze multiple complex signals – Phys.Org

July 26, 2017 Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is used to create logic circuits capable of performing various computations. In new experiments, Green and his colleagues have incorporated RNA logic gates into living bacterial cells, which act like tiny computers. Credit: Jason Drees for the Biodesign Institute

The interdisciplinary nexus of biology and engineering, known as synthetic biology, is growing at a rapid pace, opening new vistas that could scarcely be imagined a short time ago.

In new research, Alex Green, a professor at ASU's Biodesign Institute, demonstrates how living cells can be induced to carry out computations in the manner of tiny robots or computers.

The results of the new study have significant implications for intelligent drug design and smart drug delivery, green energy production, low-cost diagnostic technologies and even the development of futuristic nanomachines capable of hunting down cancer cells or switching off aberrant genes.

"We're using very predictable and programmable RNA-RNA interactions to define what these circuits can do," says Green. "That means we can use computer software to design RNA sequences that behave the way we want them to in a cell. It makes the design process a lot faster."

The study appears in the advance online edition of the journal Nature.

Designer RNA

The approach described uses circuits composed of ribonucleic acid or RNA. These circuit designs, which resemble conventional electronic circuits, self-assemble in bacterial cells, allowing them to sense incoming messages and respond to them by producing a particular computational output, (in this case, a protein).

In the new study, specialized circuits known as logic gates were designed in the lab, then incorporated into living cells. The tiny circuit switches are tripped when messages (in the form of RNA fragments) attach themselves to their complementary RNA sequences in the cellular circuit, activating the logic gate and producing a desired output.

The RNA switches can be combined in various ways to produce more complex logic gates capable of evaluating and responding to multiple inputs, just as a simple computer may take several variables and perform sequential operations like addition and subtraction in order to reach a final result.

The new study dramatically improves the ease with which cellular computing may be carried out. The RNA-only approach to producing cellular nanodevices is a significant advance, as earlier efforts required the use of complex intermediaries, like proteins. Now, the necessary ribocomputing parts can be readily designed on computer. The simple base-pairing properties of RNA's four nucleotide letters (A, C, G and U) ensure the predictable self-assembly and functioning of these parts within a living cell.

Green's work in this area began at the Wyss Institute at Harvard, where he helped develop the central component used in the cellular circuits, known as an RNA toehold switch. The work was carried out while Green was a post-doc working with nanotechnology expert Peng Yin, along with the synthetic biologists James Collins and Pamela Silver, who are all co-authors on the new paper. "The first experiments were in 2012," Green says. "Basically, the toehold switches performed so well that we wanted to find a way to best exploit them for cellular applications."

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After arriving at ASU, Green's first grad student Duo Ma worked on experiments at the Biodesign Institute, while another postdoc, Jongmin Kim continued similar work at the Wyss Institute. Both are also co-authors of the new study.

Nature's Pentium chip

The possibility of using DNA and RNA, the molecules of life, to perform computer-like computations was first demonstrated in 1994 by Leonard Adleman of the University of Southern California. Since then, rapid progress has advanced the field considerably, and recently, such molecular computing has been accomplished within living cells. (Bacterial cells are usually employed for this purpose as they are simpler and easier to manipulate.)

The technique described in the new paper takes advantage of the fact that RNA, unlike DNA, is single stranded when it is produced in cells. This allows researchers to design RNA circuits that can be activated when a complementary RNA strand binds with an exposed RNA sequence in the designed circuit. This binding of complementary strands is regular and predictable, with A nucleotides always pairing with U and C always pairing with G.

With all the processing elements of the circuit made using RNA, which can take on an astronomical number of potential sequences, the real power of the newly described method lies in its ability to perform many operations at the same time. This capacity for parallel processing permits faster and more sophisticated computation while making efficient use of the limited resources of the cell.

Logical results

In the new study, logic gates known as AND, OR and NOT were designed. An AND gate produces an output in the cell only when two RNA messages A AND B are present. An OR gate responds to either A OR B, while a NOT gate will block output if a given RNA input is present. Combining these gates can produce complex logic capable of responding to multiple inputs.

Using RNA toehold switches, the researchers produced the first ribocomputing devices capable of four-input AND, six-input OR and a 12-input device able to carry out a complex combination of AND, OR and NOT logic known as disjunctive normal form expression. When the logic gate encounters the correct RNA binding sequences leading to activation, a toehold switch opens and the process of translation to protein takes place. All of these circuit-sensing and output functions can be integrated in the same molecule, making the systems compact and easier to implement in a cell.

The research represents the next phase of ongoing work using the highly versatile RNA toehold switches. In earlier work, Green and his colleagues demonstrated that an inexpensive, paper-based array of RNA toehold switches could act as a highly accurate platform for diagnosing the Zika virus. Detection of viral RNA by the array activated the toehold switches, triggering production of a protein, which registered as a color change on the array.

The basic principle of using RNA-based devices to regulate protein production can be applied to virtually any RNA input, ushering in a new generation of accurate, low-cost diagnostics for a broad range of diseases. The cell-free approach is particularly well suited for emerging threats and during disease outbreaks in the developing world, where medical resources and personnel may be limited.

The computer within

According to Green, the next stage of research will focus on the use of the RNA toehold technology to produce so-called neural networks within living cellscircuits capable of analyzing a range of excitatory and inhibitory inputs, averaging them and producing an output once a particular threshold of activity is reached, much the way a neuron averages incoming signals from other neurons. Ultimately, researchers hope to induce cells to communicate with one another via programmable molecular signals, forming a truly interactive, brain-like network.

"Because we're using RNA, a universal molecule of life, we know these interactions can also work in other cells, so our method provides a general strategy that could be ported to other organisms," Green says, alluding to a future in which human cells become fully programmable entities with extensive biological capabilities.

Explore further: Scientists borrow from electronics to build circuits in living cells

More information: Alexander A. Green et al, Complex cellular logic computation using ribocomputing devices, Nature (2017). DOI: 10.1038/nature23271

Journal reference: Nature

Provided by: Arizona State University

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Novel RNA nanodevices in living cells can sense and analyze multiple complex signals - Phys.Org

IIT-B develops coloured nano coating for solar cells – The Hindu


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IIT-B develops coloured nano coating for solar cells
The Hindu
Mr. Soman, currently a doctoral student at the Electrical Engineering Department of University of Delaware said, We wish to make solar cells customisable, attractive and irresistible to people, along with contributing to a greener planet. Imagine ...

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IIT-B develops coloured nano coating for solar cells - The Hindu

An International Meeting of Optical Minds – Photonics.com

Photonics.com Jul 2017 SPIE Optics + Photonics, scheduled for Aug. 6-10 at the San Diego Convention Center in California, is an international, multidisciplinary optical sciences and technology meeting that annually presents the latest research in optical engineering and applications, nanotechnology, sustainable energy, organic photonics and astronomical instrumentation.

Four conference topics are held, providing an in-depth look at specific research and other work:

Nanoscience + Engineering: Advancement of nanotechnology is enabling new applications in medicine, computing, information storage and others. In this track, researchers focusing on such areas as metamaterials, nanophotonic materials, plasmonics, quantum science and technology, nanomedicine, optical trapping, nanostructured thin films, spintronics, nanostructured devices, nanoengineering, nanoimaging, nanospectroscopy, and low-dimensional materials will present their work.

Optics + Photonics for Sustainable Energy: This segment focuses specifically on the development of new and sustainable energy sources. These include next generation solar cell technology, thermal radiation management, PV reliability, photovoltaics, thin film solar, hydrogen fuels, cell technology, BIPV and perovskites.

Organic Photonics + Electronics: This comprehensive track features research and work with organic-based materials and devices that advance renewable energy sources and other commercial applications. Technologies of focus will include OLEDs, OFETS, OHPVs, perovskite PVs, organic sensors, bioelectronics, liquid crystals, and hybrid memory devices and printed circuits.

Optical Engineering + Applications: The latest developments in optical design and engineering photonic devices and applications, x-ray, gamma-ray, and particle technologies, image and signal processing, astronomical optics and instrumentation, remote sensing, and space optical systems will be the focus of this conference segment.

The Technology Hot Topics program features scientists and engineers who will discuss topics relating to How Optics and Photonics Drives Innovation. Cesare Soci, of Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, will focus on quantum devices; speaking about bioelectronics, wearables and implantables will be Nanshu Lu, of the University of Texas at Austin; Scott McEldowney, from Oculus, will discuss augmented and virtual reality; Tanja Cuk, of the University of California, Berkeley, will focus on solar fuels; and Charles D. Edwards Jr., from NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory, will round out the program with a talk on autonomous vehicles.

Features again this year will be numerous plenary sessions. There will be speakers and presenters from around the world, representing industry and academia Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, the U.S. Department of Energy, the University of Washington, Amazon.com Inc., and the Ecole Polytechnique Fdrale de Lausanne in Switzerland, among others.

Among courses offered this year are Imaging Spectrometry, Physiological Optics of the Eye for Engineers, Deep Learning and its Applications in Image Processing, and A Crash Course on Spin Physics. Others include Introduction to Interferometric Optical Testing, Advanced Composite Materials for Optomechanical Systems, Fundamentals of Molded Optics, Intermediate Lens Design, Infrared Focal Plane Arrays, and Detectors and Imaging.

An expansive exhibition is held throughout the conference, as well. Among the featured technologies:

test and measurement equipment optical components, lenses detectors, sensors cameras and imaging systems lasers, laser systems fiber optics chemicals, optical coatings, thin films nanoprecision LED and OLED technology

SPIE Optics + Photonics also holds a job fair, offering the opportunity for attendees to connect with recruiters from companies in all optics fields for positions such as optical engineers, military optics engineers, software development and others.

For more information about SPIE Optics + Photonics 2017, visit https://spie.org/conferences-and-exhibitions/optics-and-photonics. And be sure to visit Photonics Media at the show, at Booth 739!

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An International Meeting of Optical Minds - Photonics.com

Could Bacteria-Coated Nanofiber Electrodes be Key to Cleaning Polluted Water? – TrendinTech

Researchers from Cornell University have recently discovered a cost-effective and unique method of cleaning wastewater. Bioelectrochemical engineers and material scientists made nano fiber electrodes from electro-spun carbon then covered them in PEDOT, a conductive polymer. This coating allowed a certain type of bacteria, *Geobacter sulfurreducens, to be applied electrically. The entire process takes several hours until it forms an easily visible sheet of nanofibers.

Interestingly, the bacteria not only feed on pollutants, but it also produces electricity as it grows. The carbon nanofiber electrode is customizable and ideal for its biocompatibility with the bacteria, its high porosity, and surface area. Researchers hope that wastewater treatment plants will utilize these electrodes to capture pollutants at a greater rate than current methods while also reducing the amount of land required to do so.

Electrodes are expensive to make now, and this material could bring the price of electrodes way down, making it easier to clean up polluted water, said co-lead author Juan Guzman, a doctoral candidate in the field of biological and environmental engineering.

The research project was a collaboration across colleges, disciplines, students, and professors. Lars Angenent, a senior author on the paper and professor of biological environmental engineering says, This defines radical collaboration. We have fiber scientists talking to environmental engineers, from two very different Cornell colleges, to create reality from an idea that was more or less a hunch that will make cleaning wastewater better and a little more inexpensive.

*Geobacter sulfurreducens is a gram-negative metal and sulphur-reducing proteobacterium. It is rod-shaped, obligately anaerobic, non-fermentative, has flagellum and type four pili, and is closely related to Geobacter metallireducens.Wikipedia

The complete findings of the project were recently published in the Journal of Power Sources./ Article Source; Cornell University

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Could Bacteria-Coated Nanofiber Electrodes be Key to Cleaning Polluted Water? - TrendinTech