Simulations pinpoint atomic-level defects in solar cell nanostructures – Phys.Org

June 9, 2017 Cross section of the interface between a lead chalcogenide nanoparticle and its embedding cadmium chalcogenide matrix. When integrated into optoelectronic devices, it is enough to have a single atom in the wrong place at the interface (represented by the glowing blue color) to jeopardize their performance. Credit: Peter Allen, Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago

To understand the nature of something extremely complex, you often have to study its smallest parts. In trying to decipher the universe, for example, we search for gravitational waves or faint waves of light from the Big Bang. And to comprehend the very essence of matter itself, we break it down to the subatomic level and use computer simulations to study particles like quarks and gluons.

Understanding materials with specific functions, such as those used in solar cells, and engineering ways to improve their properties pose many of the same challenges. In the ongoing effort to improve solar cell energy conversion efficiencies, researchers have begun digging deeperin some cases to the atomic levelto identify material defects that can undermine the conversion process.

For example, heterogeneous nanostructured materials are widely used in a variety of optoelectronic devices, including solar cells. However, due to their heterogeneous nature, these materials contain nanoscale interfaces exhibiting structural defects that can affect the performance of these devices. It is very challenging to identify these defects in experiments, so a team of researchers at the Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Chicago decided to run a series of atomistic calculations at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) to find the root cause of defects in two commonly used semiconductor materialslead selenide (PbSe) and cadmium selenide (CdSe)and provide design rules to avoid them.

"We are interested in understanding quantum dots and nanostructures and how they perform for solar cells," said Giulia Galli, Liew Family professor of Molecular Engineering at the University of Chicago and co-author of a paper published in Nano Letters that outlines this work and its findings. "We are doing modeling, using both classical molecular dynamics and first principle methods, to understand the structure and optical properties of these nanoparticles and quantum dots."

Core-shell Nanoparticles

For this study, the team focused on heterostructured nanoparticlesin this case a colloidal quantum dot in which PbSe nanoparticles are embedded in CdSe. This type of quantum dotalso known as a core-shell nanoparticleis like an egg, Mrton Vrs, Aneesur Rahman Fellow at Argonne and co-author on the paper, explained, with a "yolk" made of one material surrounded by a "shell" made of the other material.

"Experiments have suggested that these heterostructured nanoparticles are very favorable for solar energy conversion and thin-film transistors," Vrs said.

For example, while colloidal quantum dot energy conversion efficiencies currently hover around 12% in the lab, "we aim at predicting quantum dot structural models to go beyond 12%," said Federico Giberti, postdoctoral research scholar at the University of Chicago's Institute for Molecular Engineering and first author on the Nano Letters paper. "If 20% efficiency could be reached, we would then have a material that becomes interesting for commercialization. "

To make this happen, however, Vrs and Giberti realized they needed to better understand the structure of nanoscale interfaces and whether atomistic defects were present. So, along with Galli, they developed a computational strategy to investigate, at the atomic level, the effect of the structure of the interfaces on the materials' optoelectronic properties. By using classical molecular dynamics and first principles methods that do not rely on any fitted parameters, their framework allowed them to build computational models of these embedded quantum dots.

Using this model as the basis for a series of simulations run at NERSC, the research team was able to characterize PbSe/CdSe quantum dots and found that atoms that are displaced at the interface and their corresponding electronic stateswhat they call "trap states"can jeopardize solar cell performance, Giberti explained. They were then able to use the model to predict a new material that does not have these trap states and should perform better in solar cells.

"Using our computational framework, we also found a way to tune the optical properties of the material by applying pressure," Giberti added.

This researchwhich included studies of electron and atomic structuresused four million supercomputing hours at NERSC, according to Vrs. Most of the atomic structure calculations were run on Cori, NERSC's 30-petaflop system installed in 2016, although they also used the Edison system, a Cray XC30 with Intel Xeon processors. While the calculations didn't need a large number of processors, Giberti noted, "I needed to launch many simultaneous simulations at the same time, and analyzing all the data was in itself a rather challenging task."

Looking ahead, the research team plans to use this new computational framework to investigate other materials and structures.

"We believe that our atomistic models, when coupled with experiments, will bring a predictive tool for heterogeneous nanostructured materials that can be used for a variety of semiconducting systems," Federico said. "We are very excited about the possible impact of our work."

Explore further: Calculations confirm that surface flaws are behind fluorescence intermittency in silicon nanocrystals

More information: Federico Giberti et al, Design of Heterogeneous Chalcogenide Nanostructures with Pressure-Tunable Gaps and without Electronic Trap States, Nano Letters (2017). DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b00283

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Simulations pinpoint atomic-level defects in solar cell nanostructures - Phys.Org

College, Grad School, and Post Doc Opportunities | Nano

As progress for nanotechnology research and development picks up speed, more and more universities in the U. S. are beginning to offer degree programs in nanotechnology. These programs now range from minor and majors in nanotechnology to Masters' programs to PhD's in any number of nanotechnology-related fields.

For those students seeking a higher education at a college or university that doesnt offer a degree in nanoscience, a student could choose to go into chemistry, physics, engineering, biology, IT, or another technology fields. With the help of a college advisor or a trusted professor or mentor, students can navigate college-level science courses to learn a great deal about nanotechnology. And keep in mind that the further you get in your education, the greater the options and choices that become available to you.

NASA Space TechnologyResearchFellowships (NSTRF)The goal of NSTRF is to sponsor U.S. citizen and permanent resident graduate students who show significant potential to contribute to NASAs goal of creating innovative new space technologies for our Nations science, exploration and economic future. NASA Space Technology Fellows will perform innovative, space-technology research at their respective campuses and at NASA Centers and/or at nonprofit U.S. Research and Development (R&D) laboratories. Awards are made in the form of training grants to accredited U.S. universities on behalf of individuals pursuing masters or doctoral degrees, with the faculty advisor serving as the principal investigator.

NASA Postdoctoral Program NASA Postdoctoral Program (NPP) supports NASAs goal to expand scientific understanding of the Earth and the universe in which we live.Selected by a competitive peer-review process, NPP Fellows complete one- to three-year Fellowship appointments that advance NASAs missions in earth science, heliophysics, planetary science, astrophysics, space bioscience, aeronautics and engineering, human exploration and space operations, and astrobiology.

Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU)NSF funds a large number of research opportunities for undergraduate students through its REU Sites program. Each student is associated with a specific research project, where he/she works closely with the faculty and other researchers. Undergraduate students supported with NSF funds must be citizens or permanent residents of the United States or its possessions.

NIST Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) program All six of the NIST laboratories in Gaithersburg, MD, participate in SURF programs. For example, the Materials Measurement Laboratory (MML) and the NIST Center for Neutron Research (NCNR) SURF program is designed to provide hands-on research experience in Ceramics, Metallurgy, Polymers, Condensed Matter Science, and Materials Reliability; available research opportunities in theMML/NCNR SURF programinclude structural and magnetic properties of nanomaterials. NIST also offersSURF research opportunities in Boulder, CO.

Science, Mathematics, & Research for Transformation (SMART) Scholarship for Service Program The SMART Scholarship for Service Program has been established by the DOD to support undergraduate and graduate students pursuing degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines. The program is an opportunity for students to receive a full scholarship and be gainfully employed upon degree completion. The program aims to increase the number of civilian scientists and engineers working at DOD laboratories.

NSF's NanoJapan International Research Experience for Undergraduates Recognized as a model for international education programs for science and engineering students, NanoJapan provides U.S. undergraduates with structured research opportunities in Japanese university laboratories with Japanese mentors.The strong educational portfolio of this project focuses on cultivating interest in nanotechnology among young U.S. undergraduate students, especially those from underrepresented groups, and encouraging such students to pursue graduate study and academic research in the physical sciences.

Intelligence Community Postdoctoral Research Fellowship Program Established in 2000 to fund basic research in areas of interest to the Intelligence Community, today, the program annually funds first- and second-year postdoctoral fellows researching topics as varied as molecular biology and robotics.

National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering Training NIH/NIBIB training opportunities are geared for undergraduate, graduate, and post-doctoral candidates. See also theNIBIB Funding pageand theNIH Training and Educationpage.

NIH's Cancer Nanotechnology Training Centers(CNTCs)CNTCs are designed to establish innovative research education programs supporting the development of a multi-disciplinary nanotechnology workforce capable of pursuing cancer research. CNTCs target graduate student and post-doctoral researchers with backgrounds in medicine, biology, and other health sciences as well as in the physical sciences, chemistry, and engineering. The program of multi-disciplinary research education in cancer nanotechnology is primarily focused on mentored laboratory-based training through participation in dedicated training research projects. (See an updated list on our NNI R&D Centers page.)

Degree Programs

Below is a list of degree programs, including Bachelors degrees with majors, minors and concentrations; Masters degrees; and PhD programs.

Boston University - Concentration in nanotechnology

Clarion University Minor in nanotechnology

Drexel University BSc Materials Engineering with Specialization Nanotechnology

Excelsior College - B.S. in Electrical Engineering Tech with Nanotechnology concentration

Georgia Tech - B.S. in Electrical Engineering with Nanosystems Specialization

Hampton University - Minor in Nanoscience

Johns Hopkins University - B.S. in Materials Science and Engineering, concentration in nanotechnology

Lock Haven University - B.S. in Applied Physics (Nanotechnology Track)

Louisiana Tech University B.S. in Nanosystems Engineering

Michigan Technological University B.S. in Physics withminor in nanotechnology

New Jersey Institute of Technology - Minor in nanotechnology

North Carolina State University, NANO@NCState program - B.S. with nanotechnology concentration

Northwestern University B.S. in Physics with Nanoscale Physics Concentration

Oregon State University - B.S. in Chemical Engineering with nanotechnology processes option

Pennsylvania State University - Minor in nanotechnology; Nanofabrication Manufacturing Technology capstone semester

Rice UniversityB.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering withConcentration in Photonics and Nanodevices, orB.S. in Materials Science andNanoengineering

Rutgers University B.S. program in Materials Science and Engineeringwith a focus on nanomaterials

Stanford University - B.S. Materials Science and Engineering with nanotechnology concentration

SUNY Polytechnic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering B.S. in Nanoscale Science or Nanoscale Engineering

University of California, Riverside B.S. in Materials Science with a concentration in nanomaterials and sensors; B.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering with a concentration in nanotechnology;B.S. in Chemical and Environmental Engineering with a nanotechnology concentration

University of California, San Diego B.S. Nanoengineering

University of Central Florida B.S. in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology track in Liberal Studies

University of Cincinnatti - Minor in Nanoengineering; Minor in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

University of Connecticut - Minor in Nanotechnology

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign - B.S. with Nanotechnology Concentration

University of Maryland, Materials Science and Engineering Interdisciplinary minor in nanotechnology

University of Notre Dame -B.S. w/ Concentration in Seminconductors and Nanotechnology

University of Southern California -Minor in Nanotechnology

University of Utah -B.S. w/ Emphasis in Micro/Nanoscale Engineering

University of Washington B.S. w/ Nanoscience and Molecular Engineering Option

Virginia Tech University -B.S. in Nanoscience

Washington State University, Nanotechnology Think Tank -B.S. w/ Specialization in Nanotechnology

Arizona State University Professional Science Master (PSM) in Nanoscience and M.A. in Applied Ethics (Ethics and Emerging Technologies)

Cornell University - M.S. Applied Physics with Nanotechnology Specialization

Johns Hopkins University M.S. with Concentration in Nanotechnology; Nano-Bio Graduate Training Program

Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering (collaborative project of North Carolina A&T State Univ. and Univ. of North Carolina Greensboro) M.S. in Nanoscience and M.S. in Nanoengineering

Louisiana Tech University M.S. in Molecular Sciences and Nanotechnology

North Carolina State University - M.S. in Nanoengineering

North Dakota State University M.S. in Materials and Nanotechnology

Northwestern University -M.S. withSpecialization in Nanotechnology

Princeton University see Rutgers listing for joint program

Radiological Technologies University VT (Indiana) M.S. in Nanomedicine

Rice University, Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology Professional Science Master (PSM) in Nanoscale Physics

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey and Princeton University- Intergrative Graduate Education Research Traineeship (IGERT) in Nanotechnology for Clean Energy

Singapore-MIT Alliance M.Eng. Advanced Materials for Micro- and Nano-Systems

Stevens Institute of Technology M.Eng. with Nanotechnology Concentration and M.S. with Nanotechnology Concentration

SUNY Polytechnic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering M.S. in Nanoscale Science and Nanoscale Engineering

University of California, Riverside Online M.S. Nanotechnology Engineering

University of California, San Diego M.S. Nanoengineering

University of Central Florida - M.S. and P.S.M in Nanotechnology

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign -Cancer Nanotechnology Concentration

University of New Mexico M.S. in Nanoscience and Microsystems

University of Pennsylvania M.S. in Nanotechnology

University of South Florida - M.S. in Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology

University of Texas at Austin M.S. withNanomaterials Thrust Area

City University of New York - Nanotechnology and Materials Science

Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering - Nanoscience or Nanoengineering

Louisana Tech University - Micro/Nanoelectronics and Micro/Nanotechnology

North Dakota State University - Materials and Nanotechnology

Northeastern University, NSFs Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) - Ph.D. in Nanomedicine

Northwestern University - Specialization in Nanotechnology

Rice University - Materials Science and NanoEngineering

South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Nanoscience and Engineering program

Stevens Institute of Technology - Nanotechnology Graduate Program

SUNY Polytechnic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering-Ph.D. in Nanoscale Science or Engineering or Medicine; M.D. in Nanoscale Medicine

University of California, Berkeley - Nanoscale Science and Engineering

University of California, Los Angelos -Ph.D. Chemistry w/ Materials and Nanoscience Specialization

University of California, San Diego - Nanoengineering

University of New Mexico - Nanoscience and Microsystems

University of North Carolina at Charlotte -Ph.D. Program in Nanoscale Science

University of Texas at Austin -Ph.D. w/ Nanomaterials Thrust

University of Utah Nanotechnology

University of Washington Dual Titled Ph.D. in (core discipline) and Nanotechnology & Molecular Engineering& Ph.D. in Molecular Engineering

Virginia Commonwealth UniversityPh.D. in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Washington State University - Graduate Certificate in Engineering Nanotechnology

Got a new program? Contact us at info@nnco.nano.govto have it listed on this site.

For more opportunities, visit our Funding Opportunities page.

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College, Grad School, and Post Doc Opportunities | Nano

UQ, partners taking computing out of this world – Phys.org – Phys.Org

June 8, 2017

University of Queensland researchers have partnered with global technology leader Lockheed Martin to develop next generation computers for aerospace applications.

ARC Future Fellow and project lead Professor Warwick Bowen said the partnership would develop a new approach to computer technology, with the potential for future commercial impacts in the aerospace industry.

"In contrast to today's computers, which rely on electric currents, this new approach will use mechanical vibrations inside the computer chip to perform computations," Professor Bowen said.

"This makes it much more robust to radiation exposure in near-earth orbit and deep space applications.

"An expected further project outcome is the development of nanotechnologies that could have wide uses in sensing, health and communications.

"The project could also improve heat management and energy efficiency in future computers."

Speaking on the partnership with UQ, Lockheed Martin Australia Chief Executive Vince Di Pietro said Lockheed Martin had a long history of collaborative research and innovation across the globe, including investment in the world's best research in Australia.

"By leveraging an existing contract established through our Global Supply Chain Enabled Innovation program into this ARC Linkage grant with UQ, we see a true partnership between industry, academia and government growing Australia's future defence industry capability," Mr Di Pietro said.

Chief investigator Dr Rachpon Kalra, awarded a UQ Development Fellowship to work with Lockheed Martin Australia, said the project would strengthen UQ's ties to one of the world's largest aerospace companies.

Fellow chief investigator Dr Christopher Baker said the project built upon UQ's expertise in nanotechnology and nanoengineering.

UQ made a recent multi-million dollar investment in nation-leading nanofabrication tools capable of building devices with features only a few tens of atoms in size.

The project is part of the University of Queensland Precision Sensing Initiative, a joint initiative of the Schools of Mathematics and Physics and of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering.

It will benefit from substantial Federal Government investment into the Australian Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems, which aims to develop next generation quantum technologies for future Australian industries.

Federal Minister for Education and Training Simon Birmingham announced the funding last month, making it one of four UQ proposals that attracted $1.28 million in Australian Government funding through the Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage Projects scheme.

The computers for aerospace project received $334,710 Federal Government funding, with cash and in-kind funding by the University and industry partner.

Dr Luke Uribarri from Lockheed Martin will be the fourth investigator on the project.

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A major Chinese investment in graphene research plans to deliver lighter, better performing aircraft and high-speed trains.

Thousands of electrical components make up today's most sophisticated systems and without innovative cooling techniques, those systems get hot. Lockheed Martin is working with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency ...

(Phys.org) Hong Kong based Reignwood Group and U.S. aerospace company Lockheed Martin have announced plans to build an Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) electricity generating plant off the coast of China to power ...

An AI machine has taken the maths section of China's annual university entrance exam, finishing it faster than students but with a below average grade.

Globally, from China and Germany to the United States, electric vehicle (EV) subsidies have been championed as an effective strategy to boost production of renewable technology and reduce greenhouse gas emissions (GHG).

As global automakers compete to bring the first flying car to market, Czech pilot Pavel Brezina is trying a different tack: instead of creating a car that flies, he has made a "GyroDrive"a mini helicopter you can drive.

Apple's new HomePod speaker may be music to the ears of its loyal fans, but how much it can crank up volume in the smart speaker market remains to be heard.

Autonomous vehicles with no human backup will be put to the test on publicly traveled roads as early as next year in what may be the first attempt at unassisted autonomous piloting.

Using Earth-abundant materials, EPFL scientists have built the first low-cost system for splitting CO2 into CO, a reaction necessary for turning renewable energy into fuel.

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Scholar Spotlight: Using Nano Technology, Amay Bandodkar Creates Self-Healing Wearable Devices – MilTech

Wearable technology has increasingly found its way into consumers lives, with the fitness tracker Fit Bit and smart watches like the Apple Watch leading the market.

In the future, we can expect to see more such wearable devicesincluding thin, small, flexible, sensors that adhere to the skin. Nano engineers have been creating prototypes of these sticker-like sensors that could have dozens of health care, consumer, and military applications.

Existing technologies present barriers to the practicality of the prototypes, however: They can tear easily, and their thin profile makes the use of batteries impractical. Nano engineer and Siebel Scholar Amay Bandodkar (University of California San Diego, BioE 16), has devoted his research to overcoming these limitations.

Siebel Scholar Amay Bandodkar is using nano technology to develop flexible and wearable health monitoring devices that use magnets to repair themselves.

As a doctoral student in the research lab of Dr. Joseph Wang at the Department of NanoEngineering at the University of California San Diego, Bandodkar worked on developing wearable devices that can sense chemicals and devices that can harvest energy from human sweat.

He also helped pioneer a breakthrough technology that enables wearable devices to heal themselves using magnetic particles. His team published an article describing the discovery in the November 2, 2016 issue of Science Advances.

Now a postdoctoral fellow at Northwestern University, Bandodkar is continuing his research on wearable chemical sensors. He is also researching implantable devices for monitoring brain activity. He is especially interested in developing devices for biomedical applications, such as monitoring ICU patients and people who have just undergone surgery.

Bandodkar spoke with the Siebel Scholars program about wearable devices, his research at Dr. Wangs lab, and the new paths hes forging at Northwestern.

Q: What will wearable electronic devices look like in the future?

In the very near future, wearable devices will conform to the skin. Think of a very thin, flexible, patch that you apply directly to the body, and which moves and breathes with the skin. The user wont even feel its presence.

These devices will monitor an array of vital parameters, such as glucose levels, electrolytes, heart rates, temperature, and stress levels. Multiple sensors on the body will interact, sending each other information, and to sensors on other people.

Right now, for instance, a pregnant woman needs to see her gynecologist to know the status of her baby and her own health. A wearable or implantable system could continuously monitor the health of the mother and baby and wirelessly transmit that information to the hospital or clinic without the need for a doctors visit.

In a military application, sensors placed on soldiers can keep a commanding officer updated on soldiers fitness levels. This information can help inform decisions about who needs a break in the action. For people with diabetes, sensors could track glucose levels and make needle prick tests obsolete.

Q: Your research on self-healing devices has undergone a few iterations. What steps did you take before you got to this latest breakthrough?

Wearable devices can be expensive to make, but printing them can significantly drive down the cost. So this has become an attractive approach. Printed, wearable devices move with the users bodythey bend, stretch, and twist. But they usually break when they experience mechanical stress. We wanted to incorporate self-healing systems to extend the lifespan of these devices.

The first approach we took was to disperse microcapsules filled with organic solvents within the device. Where damage happened, the capsules broke and released the solvent, which helped form a bridge across the cracks. Within a few seconds you got conductivity and could use the device again. This had two problems: First, you cant use non-bio compatible solvents for wearable devices. Second, the solvent evaporates over time, limiting the lifespan of the device.

Other research groups have used self-healing polymers and other chemistries to initiate the self-healing process. Those approaches require that you manually trigger self-healing by exposing the device to heat or UV light and leave it for several hours or days. These systems are also very sensitive, so under certain weather conditions, they wont perform.

Q: How has your research overcome these limitations?

We came up with the idea of using magnets. Magnets attract each other. They are very inexpensive. And they will work under just about any weather condition.

We literally bought magnets at the supermarket, then ground them down into very fine particles and infused the ink with them. That worked. When the device split or broke, the magnetic particles attracted each other and it self-healed automatically, over and over. This is what we reported on in Science Advances.

You can the self-healing process in action in this video.

Q: All of these devices need power. Your research has helped devise novel ways to harness electricity. Tell us about that.

The groups I worked with at Dr. Wangs laboratory and at Northwestern are both exploring ways to circumvent the need for batteries. The problem with batteries is that they discharge and are bulky. During my Ph.D., I worked on developing wearable biofuel cells that can scavenge energy from human sweat. We recently demonstrated that such a system can power LED lights and even a Bluetooth device.

One of the biggest challenges is optimizing the ink compositionfinding the right balance of magnetic material, binder, and electric system components. If you put in too much magnetic material, the amount of the other components you can add decreases. There is a fixed amount of solid materials that can be suspended in a polymeric binder system. All of this material affects printability as well.

Q: Where is your research headed?

In my present lab, I am working on implantable devices that can monitor neurochemicals to measure brain activity as well as wearable non-invasive chemical sensors for fitness and health care applications.

I am currently exploring integrating near-field communications (NFC) technologiesthe kind used for applications such as Apple Payinto wearable patches to overcome the need for batteries. The patch will have a small antenna on it. When you tap your phone on it, the device will transmit information to your phone such as your glucose and sodium levels, temperature, and sweat rate.

Q: What inspired you to become a nano engineer?

I have always been interested in doing research. Every day offers a new challenge. I find it much more exciting than the prospect of a 9-5 job. Growing up in Mumbai, India, I knew I wanted to do my Ph.D. in the United States.

I began my graduate studies in 2011, not long after researchers had begun developing wearable devices. I wanted to be involved in the budding nano field. I was really excited to see how we could make chemical devices and sensors that could be integrated on wearable platforms.

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Scholar Spotlight: Using Nano Technology, Amay Bandodkar Creates Self-Healing Wearable Devices - MilTech

Third building planned for Gateway research park campus – Greensboro News & Record

GREENSBORO The nanoschool is about to get a new neighbor.

The Gateway University Research Park went public Tuesday night with plans to build a third building on its south campus on East Gate City Boulevard. The new 70,000-square-foot building will go up next door to the Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering.

John Merrill, executive director of the Gateway University Research Park, said hell announce the new buildings main tenant within the next couple of weeks. Construction could start as soon as August and the building could be occupied in late 2018.

Our anchor tenant needs to be in the space as soon as we can deliver it, Merrill said in a telephone interview Wednesday. Were going to do everything we can to keep this process moving forward.

Merrill declined to name the anchor tenant but described it as an injection molding company. The company will bring its headquarters and 25 jobs to the new space initially and has promised to add 25 more, Merrill said.

The $11.7 million, two-story building will have research labs and offices as well as manufacturing and distribution spaces. The anchor tenant will occupy between a third and half of the new building. The remaining spaces will be for lease.

Greensboro City Council on Tuesday agreed to spend $1.2 million on the project.

The Gateway research park, a joint venture of N.C. A&T and UNC-Greensboro, has two campuses. The North Campus covers 75 acres along U.S. 29 near Bryan Park. The South Campus, also 75 acres, sits along Gate City Boulevard near Interstate 40/85.

The other building contains high-end laboratories and offices. Tenants include the U.S. Department of Agricultures Natural Resources Conservation Service; VF Corp.s Global Innovation Center for denim research; Triad Growth Partners, a technology and business development company; and several high-tech startups.

Contact John Newsom at (336) 373-7312 and follow @JohnNewsomNR on Twitter.

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Third building planned for Gateway research park campus - Greensboro News & Record

NSF announces 2017 winners for Generation Nano: Small Science … – National Science Foundation (press release)

News Release 17-050

Competition inspires high school students to learn the science behind nanotechnology

June 6, 2017

Today, the National Science Foundation (NSF), in partnership with the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI), named the first- and second-place winners, as well as the People's Choice winner, for the second annual Generation Nano competition.

Generation Nano challenges high school students to imagine novel superheroes who use the power of nanotechnology -- technology on the scale of a nanometer, or 1 billionth of a meter -- to solve crimes or tackle a societal challenge. Students then tell their hero's story in a comic and video. Students learn about the science behind nanotechnology before applying nanotechnology-enabled tools and concepts to futuristic characters, said Mihail C. Roco, NSF senior advisor for science and engineering and a key architect of the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI).

"This competition is like a real-life exercise in modern society, where creativity and rigor combine to engineer novel products, smart infrastructure, life-saving medical treatments and more," Roco said. "Students use their imaginations to join emerging uses of nanotechnology with other fields, bringing new viewpoints and collective interest to scientific progress. The younger generation needs such skills, as they will live and work in a more advanced society than their teachers, and we wish success to all of them as they help create the future of nanotechnology."

The winners

"I was so impressed by the imaginative ways that students used nanotechnology to ease human suffering, cure disease, fight criminals and clean up the environment in this year's Generation Nano contest," said Lisa Friedersdorf, director of the National Nanotechnology Coordination Office. "The winning comics showcase the importance of creatively applying science to solve problems. I am sure these comics and videos will excite other students and inspire them to think about how they can use nanotechnology to improve the world."

Students' superhero creations had to address one of four missions using their nanotechnology powers:

Generation Nano participants were required to submit a short, written entry about their superheroes, a two- to three-page comic and a 90-second video. A panel of judges with expertise in either nanotechnology or comics evaluated each entry and selected semifinalists and finalists. The public selected the People's Choice winner from the list of finalists.

The judges

The winners will be at the NSF booth at Awesome Con in Washington, D.C. June 16-18, and will also visit Capitol Hill. In addition, each winner is invited to tour the nearest NNI center.

Visit the Generation Nano website for competition details, such as eligibility criteria, entry guidelines, timeline, prizes, and videos and comics from the winners and finalists.

-NSF-

Media Contacts Sarah Bates, NSF, (703) 292-7738, sabates@nsf.gov

The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency that supports fundamental research and education across all fields of science and engineering. In fiscal year (FY) 2017, its budget is $7.5 billion. NSF funds reach all 50 states through grants to nearly 2,000 colleges, universities and other institutions. Each year, NSF receives more than 48,000 competitive proposals for funding and makes about 12,000 new funding awards.

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NSF announces 2017 winners for Generation Nano: Small Science ... - National Science Foundation (press release)

Here Are the Microsurgeons That Will Soon Roam Our Bodies – Singularity Hub

On a crisp fall evening in 2006, Dr. Sylvain Martel held his breath as a technician slipped an anesthetized pig into a whirling fMRI machine. His eyes stared intently at a computer screen, which showed a magnetic bead hovering inside the pigs delicate blood vessels. The tension in the room was palpable.

Suddenly, the bead jumped to life, hopping effortlessly down the vessel like a microsubmarineheading to its next target destination. The team erupted in cheers.

Martel and his team were testing a new way to remotely steer tiny objects inside a living animal by manipulating the magnetic forces of the machine. And for the first time, it worked.

Scientists and writers have long dreamed of tiny robots that navigate the bodys vast circulatory system, like space explorers surveying the galaxies and their inhabitants. The potentials are many: tiny medical microbots could, for example, shuttle radioactive drugs to cancer clusters, perform surgeries inside the body, or clear out blood clots lodged deep inside the heart or brain.

The dream is the Fantastic Voyage, but with bots instead of people, says roboticist Dr. Bradley Nelson at ETH Zurich, referencing a classic science fiction movie wherein a team of people are shrunken down and travel through a persons bloodstream to perform brain surgery on a moribund intelligence agent.

For now, medical microbots are still mostly fictional, though thats set to change within the decade. Writing in Nature this week, Drs. Mariana Medina-Snchez and Oliver G. Schmidt at the Leibniz IFW in Dresden, Germany turned away from the big screen to nanoengineering labs, setting out priorities and realistic tests to bring these tiny surgeons to life.

Medical microbots are part of the medical fields journey into miniaturization. Back in 2001, an Israeli company introduced the PillCam, a candy-sized plastic capsule that harbored a camera, batteries and wireless transmission machinery. While traveling down the alimentary canal, the PillCam periodically beamed back images wirelessly, offering a more sensitive and less toxic diagnostic measure than traditional endoscopy or X-ray imaging.

Size wise, the PillCam is gigantic for an ideal microbot, making it only suitable for the relatively wide tubing of our digestive system. The pill was also passive, unable to linger at interesting locations for a more detailed survey.

A true medical microbot must propel and steer itself through an intricate network of fluid-filled tubes to tissues deep inside the body, explains Martel.

The body, unfortunately, is rather hostile to outsiders. Microbots have to be able to survive corrosive gastric juices and paddle upstream in the blood flow without the convenience of battery-powered motors.

Labs around the world are figuring out clever alternatives to the power problem. One idea is to create what are essentially chemical rockets: cylindrical microbots loaded with fueloften a metal or other catalystthat reacts with gastric juices or other liquids to expel bubbles from the back of the tube.

These motors are hard to control, say Medina-Snchez and Schmidt. We can roughly control their direction using chemical gradients, but they dont have enough endurance and efficacy. Designing non-toxic fuels based on the bodys supplysugar, urea, or other physiological fluidsis also hard.

An arguably better alternative is metallic physical motors that can be propelled by changes in magnetic fields. Martel, as demonstrated with his bead-in-a-pig experiment, was among the first to explore these propellers.

The MRI machine is perfect for steering and imaging metallic microbot prototypes, explains Martel. The machine has several sets of magnetic coils: the main set magnetizes the microbot after it is injected into the bloodstream through a catheter. Then, by manipulating the gradient coils of the MRI, we can generate weak magnetic fields to nudge the microbot down blood vessels or other biological tubing.

In subsequent experiments, Martel made iron-cobalt nanoparticles coated with a cancer drug and injected the tiny soldiers into rabbits. Using a computer program to automatically change the magnetic field, his team steered the bots to the target location. Although there were no tumors to kill in that particular study, Martel says similar designs could prove useful for liver cancers and other tumors with relatively large vessels.

Why not smaller vessels? The problem is, again, power. Martel was only able to shrink the bot down to a few hundred micrometersanything smaller required magnetic gradients so large that they disrupted neuronal firing in the brain.

A more elegant solution is using biological motors that already exist in nature. Bacteria and sperm are both armed with whip-like tails that propel them naturally through the bodys convoluted tunnels and cavities to perform biological reactions.

By combining mechanical bits with biological bits, the two components could give each other a boost when one is faltering.

An example is the spermbot. Schmidt previously designed tiny metal helices that wrap around lazy sperm, giving them a mobility boost to reach the egg. Sperm could also be loaded with drugs, linked to a magnetic microstructure to treat cancers in the reproductive tract.

Then there are specialized groups of bacteria called MC-1 that align themselves with Earths magnetic field. By generating a very weak fieldjust enough to overcome Earthsscientists can point the bacterias internal compass towards a new goal such as cancer.

Unfortunately, drug-tagged MC-1 bacteria only survive in warm blood for roughly 40 minutes, and most arent strong enough to swim against the bloodstream. Martel envisions a hybrid system made of bacteria and fat-based bubbles. The bubbles, loaded with magnetic particles and bacteria, would be guided down larger blood vessels using strong magnetic fields until they smack into narrower ones. Upon impact, the bubbles would pop and release the swarms of bacteria to finish their journey, guided by weaker magnetic fields.

While scientists have plenty of ideas for propellers, a main hurdle is tracking the microbots once theyre released into the body.

Combining different types of imaging techniques may be the way forward. Ultrasound, MRI and infrared are all too slow to follow microbots operating deep within the body by themselves. However, combining light, sound, and electromagnetic waves could increase resolution and sensitivity.

Ideally, an imaging method should be able to track micromotors 10 centimeters under the skin, in 3D and real-time, moving at minimum speeds of tens of micrometers per second,say Medina-Snchez and Schmidt.

Its a tall order, though theyre hopeful that cutting-edge optoacousticmethodscombining infrared and ultrasound imagingcould be good enough to track microbots within a few years.

Then theres the question of what to do with the bots after theyve finished their mission. Leaving them drifting inside the body could result in clots or other catastrophic side effects, such as metal poisoning. Driving the bots back to their starting point (mouth, eyes, and other natural orifices, for example) may be too tedious. Scientists are now exploring better options: expelling the bots naturallyor making them out of biodegradable materials.

The latter has another plus: if the materials are also sensitive to heat, pH, or other bodily factors, they can make autonomous biobots that operate without batteries. For example, scientists have already made little star-shaped grippers that close around tissues when exposed to heat. When placed around diseased organs or tissues, the grippers could perform on-site biopsies, offering a less invasive way to screen for colon cancers or monitor chronic inflammatory bowel disease.

The goal is a microbot that can sense, diagnose, and act autonomously, while people monitor it and retain control in case of malfunction, say Medina-Snchez and Schmidt.

The medical microbots fantastic voyage is just beginning.

All combinations of materials, microorganisms and microstructures need to be tested together for their behavior in animals first to ensure safety and function. Scientists are also waiting for regulators to catch up, and for clinicians to ponder new ways to deploy these new microbots in diagnostics and treatments.

But optimism is growing in the ever-expanding field.

With a coordinated push, microbots could usher in an era of non-invasive therapies within a decade, declare Medina-Snchez and Schmidt.

Banner image and video ("Self-Folding Thermo-Magnetically Responsive Soft Microgrippers) courtesy of ACS Applied Materials & Interfacesand licensedCC BY-NC.

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Here Are the Microsurgeons That Will Soon Roam Our Bodies - Singularity Hub

Scholar Spotlight: Using Nano Technology, Amay Bandodkar Creates Self-Healing Wearable Devices – satPRnews (press release)

Wearable technology has increasingly found its way into consumers lives, with the fitness tracker Fit Bit and smart watches like the Apple Watch leading the market.

In the future, we can expect to see more such wearable devicesincluding thin, small, flexible, sensors that adhere to the skin. Nano engineers have been creating prototypes of these sticker-like sensors that could have dozens of health care, consumer, and military applications.

Existing technologies present barriers to the practicality of the prototypes, however: They can tear easily, and their thin profile makes the use of batteries impractical. Nano engineer and Siebel Scholar Amay Bandodkar (University of California San Diego, BioE 16), has devoted his research to overcoming these limitations.

Siebel Scholar Amay Bandodkar is using nano technology to develop flexible and wearable health monitoring devices that use magnets to repair themselves.

As a doctoral student in the research lab of Dr. Joseph Wang at the Department of NanoEngineering at the University of California San Diego, Bandodkar worked on developing wearable devices that can sense chemicals and devices that can harvest energy from human sweat.

He also helped pioneer a breakthrough technology that enables wearable devices to heal themselves using magnetic particles. His team published an article describing the discovery in the November 2, 2016 issue of Science Advances.

Now a postdoctoral fellow at Northwestern University, Bandodkar is continuing his research on wearable chemical sensors. He is also researching implantable devices for monitoring brain activity. He is especially interested in developing devices for biomedical applications, such as monitoring ICU patients and people who have just undergone surgery.

Bandodkar spoke with the Siebel Scholars program about wearable devices, his research at Dr. Wangs lab, and the new paths hes forging at Northwestern.

Q: What will wearable electronic devices look like in the future?

In the very near future, wearable devices will conform to the skin. Think of a very thin, flexible, patch that you apply directly to the body, and which moves and breathes with the skin. The user wont even feel its presence.

These devices will monitor an array of vital parameters, such as glucose levels, electrolytes, heart rates, temperature, and stress levels. Multiple sensors on the body will interact, sending each other information, and to sensors on other people.

Right now, for instance, a pregnant woman needs to see her gynecologist to know the status of her baby and her own health. A wearable or implantable system could continuously monitor the health of the mother and baby and wirelessly transmit that information to the hospital or clinic without the need for a doctors visit.

In a military application, sensors placed on soldiers can keep a commanding officer updated on soldiers fitness levels. This information can help inform decisions about who needs a break in the action. For people with diabetes, sensors could track glucose levels and make needle prick tests obsolete.

Q: Your research on self-healing devices has undergone a few iterations. What steps did you take before you got to this latest breakthrough?

Wearable devices can be expensive to make, but printing them can significantly drive down the cost. So this has become an attractive approach. Printed, wearable devices move with the users bodythey bend, stretch, and twist. But they usually break when they experience mechanical stress. We wanted to incorporate self-healing systems to extend the lifespan of these devices.

The first approach we took was to disperse microcapsules filled with organic solvents within the device. Where damage happened, the capsules broke and released the solvent, which helped form a bridge across the cracks. Within a few seconds you got conductivity and could use the device again. This had two problems: First, you cant use non-bio compatible solvents for wearable devices. Second, the solvent evaporates over time, limiting the lifespan of the device.

Other research groups have used self-healing polymers and other chemistries to initiate the self-healing process. Those approaches require that you manually trigger self-healing by exposing the device to heat or UV light and leave it for several hours or days. These systems are also very sensitive, so under certain weather conditions, they wont perform.

Q: How has your research overcome these limitations?

We came up with the idea of using magnets. Magnets attract each other. They are very inexpensive. And they will work under just about any weather condition.

We literally bought magnets at the supermarket, then ground them down into very fine particles and infused the ink with them. That worked. When the device split or broke, the magnetic particles attracted each other and it self-healed automatically, over and over. This is what we reported on in Science Advances.

You can the self-healing process in action in this video.

Q: All of these devices need power. Your research has helped devise novel ways to harness electricity. Tell us about that.

The groups I worked with at Dr. Wangs laboratory and at Northwestern are both exploring ways to circumvent the need for batteries. The problem with batteries is that they discharge and are bulky. During my Ph.D., I worked on developing wearable biofuel cells that can scavenge energy from human sweat. We recently demonstrated that such a system can power LED lights and even a Bluetooth device.

One of the biggest challenges is optimizing the ink compositionfinding the right balance of magnetic material, binder, and electric system components. If you put in too much magnetic material, the amount of the other components you can add decreases. There is a fixed amount of solid materials that can be suspended in a polymeric binder system. All of this material affects printability as well.

Q: Where is your research headed?

In my present lab, I am working on implantable devices that can monitor neurochemicals to measure brain activity as well as wearable non-invasive chemical sensors for fitness and health care applications.

I am currently exploring integrating near-field communications (NFC) technologiesthe kind used for applications such as Apple Payinto wearable patches to overcome the need for batteries. The patch will have a small antenna on it. When you tap your phone on it, the device will transmit information to your phone such as your glucose and sodium levels, temperature, and sweat rate.

Q: What inspired you to become a nano engineer?

I have always been interested in doing research. Every day offers a new challenge. I find it much more exciting than the prospect of a 9-5 job. Growing up in Mumbai, India, I knew I wanted to do my Ph.D. in the United States.

I began my graduate studies in 2011, not long after researchers had begun developing wearable devices. I wanted to be involved in the budding nano field. I was really excited to see how we could make chemical devices and sensors that could be integrated on wearable platforms.

Wearable technology has increasingly found its way into consumers lives, with the fitness tracker Fit Bit and smart watches like the Apple Watch leading the market.

In the future, we can expect to see more such wearable devicesincluding thin, small, flexible, sensors that adhere to the skin. Nano engineers have been creating prototypes of these sticker-like sensors that could have dozens of health care, consumer, and military applications.

Existing technologies present barriers to the practicality of the prototypes, however: They can tear easily, and their thin profile makes the use of batteries impractical. Nano engineer and Siebel Scholar Amay Bandodkar (University of California San Diego, BioE 16), has devoted his research to overcoming these limitations.

Siebel Scholar Amay Bandodkar is using nano technology to develop flexible and wearable health monitoring devices that use magnets to repair themselves.

As a doctoral student in the research lab of Dr. Joseph Wang at the Department of NanoEngineering at the University of California San Diego, Bandodkar worked on developing wearable devices that can sense chemicals and devices that can harvest energy from human sweat.

He also helped pioneer a breakthrough technology that enables wearable devices to heal themselves using magnetic particles. His team published an article describing the discovery in the November 2, 2016 issue of Science Advances.

Now a postdoctoral fellow at Northwestern University, Bandodkar is continuing his research on wearable chemical sensors. He is also researching implantable devices for monitoring brain activity. He is especially interested in developing devices for biomedical applications, such as monitoring ICU patients and people who have just undergone surgery.

Bandodkar spoke with the Siebel Scholars program about wearable devices, his research at Dr. Wangs lab, and the new paths hes forging at Northwestern.

Q: What will wearable electronic devices look like in the future?

In the very near future, wearable devices will conform to the skin. Think of a very thin, flexible, patch that you apply directly to the body, and which moves and breathes with the skin. The user wont even feel its presence.

These devices will monitor an array of vital parameters, such as glucose levels, electrolytes, heart rates, temperature, and stress levels. Multiple sensors on the body will interact, sending each other information, and to sensors on other people.

Right now, for instance, a pregnant woman needs to see her gynecologist to know the status of her baby and her own health. A wearable or implantable system could continuously monitor the health of the mother and baby and wirelessly transmit that information to the hospital or clinic without the need for a doctors visit.

In a military application, sensors placed on soldiers can keep a commanding officer updated on soldiers fitness levels. This information can help inform decisions about who needs a break in the action. For people with diabetes, sensors could track glucose levels and make needle prick tests obsolete.

Q: Your research on self-healing devices has undergone a few iterations. What steps did you take before you got to this latest breakthrough?

Wearable devices can be expensive to make, but printing them can significantly drive down the cost. So this has become an attractive approach. Printed, wearable devices move with the users bodythey bend, stretch, and twist. But they usually break when they experience mechanical stress. We wanted to incorporate self-healing systems to extend the lifespan of these devices.

The first approach we took was to disperse microcapsules filled with organic solvents within the device. Where damage happened, the capsules broke and released the solvent, which helped form a bridge across the cracks. Within a few seconds you got conductivity and could use the device again. This had two problems: First, you cant use non-bio compatible solvents for wearable devices. Second, the solvent evaporates over time, limiting the lifespan of the device.

Other research groups have used self-healing polymers and other chemistries to initiate the self-healing process. Those approaches require that you manually trigger self-healing by exposing the device to heat or UV light and leave it for several hours or days. These systems are also very sensitive, so under certain weather conditions, they wont perform.

Q: How has your research overcome these limitations?

We came up with the idea of using magnets. Magnets attract each other. They are very inexpensive. And they will work under just about any weather condition.

We literally bought magnets at the supermarket, then ground them down into very fine particles and infused the ink with them. That worked. When the device split or broke, the magnetic particles attracted each other and it self-healed automatically, over and over. This is what we reported on in Science Advances.

You can the self-healing process in action in this video.

Q: All of these devices need power. Your research has helped devise novel ways to harness electricity. Tell us about that.

The groups I worked with at Dr. Wangs laboratory and at Northwestern are both exploring ways to circumvent the need for batteries. The problem with batteries is that they discharge and are bulky. During my Ph.D., I worked on developing wearable biofuel cells that can scavenge energy from human sweat. We recently demonstrated that such a system can power LED lights and even a Bluetooth device.

One of the biggest challenges is optimizing the ink compositionfinding the right balance of magnetic material, binder, and electric system components. If you put in too much magnetic material, the amount of the other components you can add decreases. There is a fixed amount of solid materials that can be suspended in a polymeric binder system. All of this material affects printability as well.

Q: Where is your research headed?

In my present lab, I am working on implantable devices that can monitor neurochemicals to measure brain activity as well as wearable non-invasive chemical sensors for fitness and health care applications.

I am currently exploring integrating near-field communications (NFC) technologiesthe kind used for applications such as Apple Payinto wearable patches to overcome the need for batteries. The patch will have a small antenna on it. When you tap your phone on it, the device will transmit information to your phone such as your glucose and sodium levels, temperature, and sweat rate.

Q: What inspired you to become a nano engineer?

I have always been interested in doing research. Every day offers a new challenge. I find it much more exciting than the prospect of a 9-5 job. Growing up in Mumbai, India, I knew I wanted to do my Ph.D. in the United States.

I began my graduate studies in 2011, not long after researchers had begun developing wearable devices. I wanted to be involved in the budding nano field. I was really excited to see how we could make chemical devices and sensors that could be integrated on wearable platforms.

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Scholar Spotlight: Using Nano Technology, Amay Bandodkar Creates Self-Healing Wearable Devices - satPRnews (press release)

New Fields Fast: The NanoCar Race and Quantum Mechanical Engineering – Edgy Labs (blog)

After their Nanocarfinished second at the first molecular-car race, an Ohio University team is laying the groundwork for the new field of quantum mechanical engineering.

This is a completely new concept of car racing. Think of a NASCAR race, but instead of hot rods roaring on the tarmac, you have cars made up of few molecules, invisible to the naked eye, speeding on a track 50,000 times thinner than the stroke of a ballpoint pen!

What I described is the NanoCar Race that was held last April by CNRS (the National Centre for Scientific Research), a French organization under the Ministry of Education and Research.

The NanoCar Race, which took place over 36 hours between the 28th and 29th of April in Toulouse, saw the participation of 6 international teams.

Four-wheeled molecular cars of different shapes and sizes raced on 100-nanometer gold track, powered by an electrical pulse generated by an STM (scanning tunneling microscope) that uses a quantum mechanics phenomenon known as the tunnel effect.

Speed isnt everything, as the winner should be the one that made the greatest distance during the 36 hours.

According to the final ranking of CNRS, there were two winners ex-aequo, The US-Austrian team (Rice/Graz universities) whose NanoPrix made 1 micron in 29 hours (on a silver surface), and the Swiss team (Bazel University), whose car traveled 133 nm in 6-and-a-half hours.

Coming in second was the Ohio University team with their Bobcat nano-wagon, which traveled 43 nm; and last, the German team (Dresden University), whose car traveled 11 nm. There were also two other unranked teams: the Japanese team (NIMS-MANA) was awarded the Fair play prize, and the French team (Toulouse) took home the most beautiful car prize.

The Bobcat Nano-Wagon was developed at Laboratory for Single Atom and Molecule Manipulationat Ohio University. Although the Bobcat came in second and performed rather well, the team blames a thunderstorm in Ohio that caused power issues, as the nano-wagon was remotely-controlled across the ocean.

Nevertheless, the end of the race for the Bobcat nano-wagon is only the beginning of yet another exciting perspective.

Team leader and pilot, Saw-Wai Hla have bigger plans in store. The teams two-target project is, first to develop a controlled molecular transport system, and two, help launching a whole new field of study: quantum mechanical engineering.

Professor Hla and his teammates are not sure whether the wheels glide or roll across the nano-surface where gravity is irrelevant, or how the nano-wagon adheres toand moves across the surface.

Currently in early theoretical discussions, the field of quantum mechanical engineering would benefit from further study of nanocars and open the way to new concepts. For example, building electronic circuits and nano-sized data storage devices.

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New Fields Fast: The NanoCar Race and Quantum Mechanical Engineering - Edgy Labs (blog)

Aerospace engineer to get tough on ceramics with Office of Naval … – Penn State News

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. Namiko Yamamoto, assistant professor of aerospace engineering at Penn State, was recently awarded $447,663 through the Office of Naval Research (ONR) Sea-Based Aviation Airframe Structures and Materials program to study fundamental toughening mechanisms of novel ceramic composites and their use as alternative materials for high-temperature applications in the aerospace industry.

Through her project titled Multi-functional Nano-porous Ceramics, Yamamoto, in collaboration with Jogender Singh, professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and chief scientist in Penn States Applied Research Laboratory, will seek to understand how the introduction of nano-pores into ceramics contributes to enhanced fracture toughness and increased damage tolerance, with minimal compromising of the materials strength.

Tougher ceramic materials are in high demand for numerous aerospace applications that require adequate mechanical strength, stability in extreme environments and lightweight materials, said Yamamoto. Although ceramics exist that meet those requirements, their applications as bulk structural materials are currently limited to their brittleness and low fracture toughness.

Ceramics have a unique combination of material properties, such as low density, high strength at high temperatures, wear resistance, corrosion resistance and low thermal and electrical conductivities. However, when high stress is placed on them, premature or catastrophic failure can occur.

Recently, some unique deformation behaviors have been observed when nano-porous ceramics are indented, including shear banding of collapsed pores. If controlled, this quasi-plastic deformation could potentially contribute to intrinsic toughening of ceramics and effectively mitigate crack initiation and propagation.

Systematic understanding is currently missing about shear banding and its relation to fracture toughness of nano-porous ceramics, said Yamamoto. By conducting multi-scale parametric studies, we hope to gain the knowledge that is critical to the acceleration of practical fabrication and use of macro-scale, nano-porous ceramic materials with increased damage tolerance. Also, through field-assisted sintering technology, we will pursue scalable manufacturing of such nano-porous ceramics.

If successful, the toughened nano-porous ceramics could find use as alternative materials for high-temperature and high-shear loading applications in aerospace engineering parts, helicopter rotor heads, ball-point bearings, gear boxes, thermal and physical protection layers, abrasive cutting tools and more.

Funding for the project will span three years and will support ONRs interest in the field of Sea-Based Aviation Airframe Structures and Materials.

Yamamoto also received an ONR grant in 2016 for her research proposal titled 1D-Patterned Nanocomposites Structured Using Oscillating Magnetic Fields.

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Aerospace engineer to get tough on ceramics with Office of Naval ... - Penn State News

New center will push frontiers of sensing technology – MIT News

In anticipation of the official opening of the new MIT.nano building which will house some of the worlds leading facilities supporting research in nanoscience and nanotechnology MIT last week officially launched a new center of excellence called SENSE.nano, which is dedicated to pushing the frontiers of research in sensing technologies.

Like the new building, which is slated to open a year from now, SENSE.nano is an endeavor that cuts across the divisions of departments, labs, and schools, to encompass research in areas including chemistry, physics, materials science, electronics, computer science, biology, mechanical engineering, and more. Faculty members from many of these areas spoke about their research during a daylong conference on May 25 that marked the official launch of the new center.

Introducing the event, MIT President L. Rafael Reif said that [MIT.nano] will create opportunities for research and collaboration for more than half our current faculty, and 67 percent of those recently tenured. In fact, we expect that it will serve and serve to inspire more than 2,000 people across our campus, from all five MIT schools, and many more from beyond our walls.

Explaining the impetus for creating this new center, Reif said that MIT is famous for making because we have a community of makers a concentration of brilliant people who are excited to share their experience and their ideas, to teach you to use their tools and to learn what you know, too. On a much bigger scale, this is the same magic we hope for in creating SENSE.nano. As MIT.nanos first center of excellence, SENSE.nano will bring together a wide array of researchers, inventors, and entrepreneurs fascinated by the potential of sensors and sensing systems to transform our world.

The development of new kinds of connected, inexpensive, and widespread sensing devices, harnessing the power of nanoscale imaging and manufacturing systems, could impact many of the worlds most pressing problems, said Vincent Roche, president of Analog Devices, who gave the opening keynote talk. Such new technology has the potential to solve problems that have plagued humanity for millennia, including food and water security, health care, and environmental degradation.

The 200,000-square-foot facility, in addition to more than doubling the amount of clean-room imaging and fabrication space available to MIT researchers, also contains one of the quietest spaces on the eastern seaboard, said Brian Anthony, co-leader of the new center of excellence and a principal researcher in the mechanical engineering department, referring to an exceptionally vibration-free environment created on the new buildings basement level, where the most sensitive of instruments, that require a perfectly stable base, will be housed.

To show by example what some of that cross-disciplinary work will look like, several faculty members described the research they are doing now and explained how its scope and capabilities will be greatly enhanced by the new imaging and fabrication tools that will become available when MIT.nano officially opens for research.

Tim Swager, the John D. MacArthur Professor of Chemistry, described ongoing work that he and his students have been doing on developing tiny, low-cost sensors that can be incorporated in the packaging of fruits and vegetables. The sensors could detect the buildup of gases that could lead to premature ripening or rotting, as a way to reduce the amount of food wasted during transportation and storage. Polina Anikeeva, the Class of 1942 Career Development Associate Professor in Materials Science and Engineering, talked about developing flexible, stretchable fibers for implantation in brain and spinal cord tissues, which could ultimately lead to ways of restoring motion to those with spinal cord injuries.

Others described large-area sensing systems that could incorporate computation and logic so that only the most relevant data would need to be transmitted, helping to curb a data overload; and sensors built from nanotubes that could be bent, twisted, or stretched while still gathering data. Still others described ways of integrating electronics with photonic devices, which use light instead of electrons to carry and manipulate data. Also presented was work on using fluorescing quantum-dot particles to provide imaging of living tissues without the need for incisions, and building sensors that can continuously monitor buildings, bridges, and other structures to detect signs of likely failure long before disaster strikes.

The future will be measured in nanometers, said MIT Professor Vladimir Bulovic, in a panel discussion at the end of the conference, moderated by Tom Ashbrook, host of NPRs On Point. Bulovic, who is the faculty lead for the MIT.nano building and the Fariborz Maseeh Chair in Emerging Technology, added, We are right now at the renaissance age of nano. He noted that devices all around us and in our pockets are constantly sensing, recording, and sometimes transmitting data about our surroundings.

We can access data on how the world around us really functions, and with that data, we can take the next step of influencing the environment to improve our health, protect our natural environment, and monitor our buildings, structures, and devices to make sure they are working as they should, he said. The opportunity is vast.

In his introduction, Reif also hailed the potential of whats sometimes called ubiquitous sensing: Tomorrows optical, mechanical, electrical, chemical, and biological sensors, alone and networked together, offer a huge range of new possibilities in terms of understanding and controlling the world around us. Sensors will change how we protect our soldiers and keep our bridges safe. How we monitor the polar ice caps, and monitor how children learn. Sensors will change how we keep our water clean, our patients healthy, and our energy supply secure. In short, sensors and sensing systems will be the source of new products, new capabilities and whole new industries. And we should not be surprised if some of them are deeply disruptive.

Disruption, of course, can be a two-edged sword. So, Reif said, one of the challenges facing those who innovate in this field, as technology races to the future, is how to help society navigate its unintended impacts. If we can make this a first concern, and not an afterthought, I have no doubt that this community will continue to be a major force in making a better world.

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New center will push frontiers of sensing technology - MIT News

Engineering Student Shares Insights from a Semester at Los Alamos … – Duke Today

Zhiqin Huang, a doctoral student in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Dukes Pratt School of Engineering, received a grant to spend time at the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. By leveraging the labs cutting-edge facilities and other resources, she aimed to gain skills and knowledge to inform her dissertation on novelnanostructures to develop extremely low-energy and ultrafast plasmonic switches.

Huang was among 19 graduate students from five schools at Duke who received Graduate Student Training Enhancement Grants in 2016 for training beyond their core disciplines. Her faculty mentor was David R. Smith. She shared this update.

Thanks to the GSTEG, I had a chance to visit Los Alamos National Lab (LANL) for a half year. Located in New Mexico, it is probably the most famous federal government laboratory and well known for decades due to the development of the first atomic bomb and research in multiple disciplines.

During this visit, I obtained a comprehensive training including hands-on laser training, electricity safety training, cryogen safety, radiological training, chemical safety, hazardous waste and environment management as well as lab management trainings.

Since I needed to go to Sandia National Lab (SNL) to do experiments, I got various related training there on different high-tech fabrication tools such as JEOL EBL (E-beam lithography) and ALD (Atomic layer deposition). I also learned how to make graphene, which is a very interesting 2D material. All these trainings were very helpful to my research in LANL and at Duke.

The main purpose of the visit was to learn optics-related experiment techniques. I had a chance to work with scientists in the laboratory for ultrafast materials and optical sciences (LUMOS). In particular, I got involved in the optical ultrafast pump-probe experiments to investigate new materials such as Weyls metals and Dirac materials. I also learned the Terahertz (THz) pump and optical probe system.

Based on the rich resources in the national lab, I even built a new pump-probe system independently and did a group of experiments using newly fabricated samples and obtained primary results.

In addition, I attended the training for a newly developed optical system known as scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM), which includes AFM, nano-FTIR, nano-imaging and ultrafast pump-probe with the spatial resolution of 10nm and temporal resolution of 10fs. This incredible experience will be essential when we build our own system at Duke in the near future.

Furthermore, I attended several LANL internal forums related to nanooptics as well as invaluable seminars given by researchers in the lab and invited scholars. Through discussions with some talented experts in the field of my research, I gained a much better understanding on both theory and experiments.

This internal funding mechanism from the Office of the Vice Provost for Interdisciplinary Studies encourages graduate students to step away from their core research and training to acquire additional skills, knowledge or co-curricular experiences that will give them new perspectives on their research agendas. Graduate Student Training Enhancement Grants are intended to deepen preparation for academic positions and other career trajectories.

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Engineering Student Shares Insights from a Semester at Los Alamos ... - Duke Today

Inside MIT.nano – MIT News

On a recent evening, Cathrin Stickney stood marveling at the stillness of the custom-designed imaging suites in the underground level of MIT.nano the environmentally quietest space on campus. Laudably ultra-low vibrations, ultra-low electromagnetic interference, and acoustically silent. All in a building that, like most of the rest of MIT, sits on a century-old landfill built on swampland.

Its more than difficult to pull that off. Its architecturally amazing, Stickney, a successful entrepreneur and former architect, said. Equipped with a neon safety vest and clear safety glasses, Stickney was on site to learn more about a building that embodies one of the largest research investments in MIT history.

The leaders of MIT.nano pulled out all the stops during the first-ever tour of the 214,000 gross-square-foot research facility taking shape in the heart of MIT campus, just steps from the Infinite Corridor. The tightly choreographed public viewing involved safely navigating 60 guests, mostly members of the MIT Corporation, through what is still an active construction site.

Nanoscience and nanotechnology are driving some of the most important innovations today, in health care, energy, computing almost every field of engineering and science. A facility that allows MIT faculty and students to play a role in these coming changes is of the Institutes highest priority, says President L. Rafael Reif, who was along for the tour. As he has said: Even big problems have answers if you have your hands on the right tools.

As the tour group convened in a conference room near where they would access the site, the projects faculty lead, Vladimir Bulovi, fine-tuned that sentiment. The toolset we need to bring forward the next generation of ideas is a nano toolset, and with those words Bulovi and his team launched the first public showing of MIT.nano.

The sneak peek

Starting in the MIT.nano subterranean level, Stickney and husband Mark Gorenberg 76, a venture capitalist, took in the cavernous space. The imaging suites are set on what Dennis Grimard, the buildings operations director, calls The Inertia Slab a structure that complements the location of MIT.nano, and makes it the quietest spot on campus. The slab is a block made of 3.2 million pounds of concrete poured onto 400,000 pounds of epoxy-coated rebar. Its creation required approximately more than 100 cement trucks operated continuously in a single day from 4 a.m. to 4 p.m.

With hands clasped, the couple listened attentively as Thomas Schwartz, a biology professor, spoke about the scope of research MIT.nano will enable. The extreme shielding from environmental noise, he said, will satisfy the challenging low-vibration demands of high-end electron microscopes, particularly those for biological imaging. His delight was palpable. These new microscopes will allow us to visualize large protein complexes at atomic resolution, and to observe thin sections of entire cells in nanometer precision, said Schwartz, the Boris Magasanik Professor of Biology. This truly represents a quantum leap for structural and cell biology!

On the construction elevator, jolting from the basement to the first floor, Stickney said: The massive amount of effort put into all of this is stunning. Shouting above the wind, Gorenberg agreed. It makes sense from an investment standpoint, he remarked. Nanotechnology cuts across all disciplines, so its going to be vital to everyone.

The clean rooms

The hoist clanged to a stop, and the group exited to check out state-of-the-art clean rooms. Waiting for them was Luis Velsquez-Garca, a principal research scientist in the Microsystems Technology Laboratories, and an expert in micro- and nanofabrication technologies. Outfitted in a white jumpsuit, he quickly launched into a description of how MIT.nano will open new worlds for researchers. The clean room will be like a hive, he said, bustling with people working together to make breakthroughs in nanotechnology. It will enable: devices that can produce X-rays for medical imaging, nanosatellite propulsion, and plasma diagnostics. He described a future in which nanotechnology-enabled materials dramatically change 3-D-printing technology.

Tour guests checked out the clean rooms on the third level, too, where sunlight pours through glass in hallways that overlook the MIT dome and new courtyard below. Krystyn Van Vliet, a professor of materials science and engineering and biological engineering, described how clean rooms will provide a precisely controlled environment with low levels of dust, airborne microbes, aerosol particles, chemical vapors, and anything else that can get in the way of their work. Van Vliet, the Michael (1949) and Sonja Koerner Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, studies material behavior at the interface of mechanics, chemistry, physics, and biology. She informed tour guests that the facility will connect MIT experts in materials synthesis, characterization, and teaching for a range of applications, and build on the inspiration of interdisciplinary collaborators such as the late Institute Professor Emerita of Physics and Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Mildred Dresselhaus.

Van Vliet, the director of manufacturing innovation for the MIT Innovation Initiative, also said MIT.nano is poised to support an innovation community that will help usher in next-generation manufacturing processes and training approaches for production of electronics, photonics, fibers, and biopharmaceuticals. For instance, the facility will benefit academic and industry partnerships for MIT researchers who participate in Manufacturing USA Institutes, a network of public-private partnerships between government, industry, and academia focused on de-risking and prototyping new manufacturing capabilities to speed adoption by U.S. manufacturers.

Throughout the building, MIT faculty were working hard to convey their excitement. Academics were situated on every level, and even the guides escorting guests through the building were impressively credentialed: Anuradha Agarwal, a principal research scientist at the Microphotonics Center who develops miniaturized chemical sensors; Polina Anikeeva, the Class of 1942 Career Development Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering who stimulates brain activity using nanotechnologies; electrical engineering professors Karl Berggren, who specializes in nanofab and quantum devices, and Rajeev Ram, who develops novel photonics and electronics; and William Tisdale, the Charles and Hilda Roddey Career Development Professor in Chemical Engineering, who explores use of colloidal quantum dots and 2-D materials in next-generation renewable energy technologies. All the stops, pulled.

A game-changer

MIT.nano is designed as an invitation to the community. With 53,000 square-feet of glass on its exterior surface, the new building may be surrounded on all sides by other buildings, but its appearance and effect are transparency. As Grimard explains, Typically, MIT buildings have windowed offices along the outside and labs get placed on the inside. We did just the opposite. We wanted the MIT community to see inside and have that connectivity with the space. This is everyones building.

Prepared to serve more than 2,000 researchers from across campus, MIT.nano will be transformative. An interior building set in the footprint of the former Building 12, its broader visibility will rely greatly on the research collaborations forged within its walls. Those connections hold the power to reimagine MIT.

The wrap-up

The guests finished by touring the upper levels of MIT.nano. On the fifth floor, which is dedicated to prototyping maker spaces and teaching labs, presenter Brian Anthony, director of MITs Master of Engineering and Manufacturing Program, told guests MIT.nano will become a central resource for creating disruptive technologies. Researchers will gain the ability to distinguish and manipulate materials at the atomic scale, create devices using those materials, and develop ways of implementing those devices within larger systems. MIT.nano is not owned by any one area of MIT, he said. Or put simply, added Anthony: MIT.nano is like an iPhone and researchers across campus are welcome to make the apps.

Nodding as he listened, John Chisholm 75, SM 76, a serial entrepreneur, commented: You can see how many disciplines meet here, he said. This is the future of research and education: conventional boundaries among schools and departments are disappearing."

Chisholm and the other guests piled back into the hoist, which came to its final stop: the mechanical penthouse, where MIT.nanos senior project manager Travis Wanat awaited. Wanat is a true believer in the promise of MIT.nano. He met with 35 labs, centers, and departments mainly abutters to the site to allay concerns from the start. Not an easy task when simply pouring the foundation involved the removal of 1.4 million cubic feet of dirt. Now the project, which Bulovi refers to as a dream nearing reality, is finally at least briefly on public display. Wanat eagerly detailed the construction process and took a barrage of questions about prefabrication strategy, metrics for overall savings, the early procurement process, and more.

Satisfied with the detailed answers, the Corporation members descended by stairs to the unfinished courtyard below. They held metal handrails rather than wooden ones, warned earlier of splinters. They spoke of the building design particularly the energy conservation strategies with approval.

The building is amazingly larger than any of us could have imagined, said Gorenberg. Alan Spoon 73, a venture capitalist, added: The opportunity for students and researchers to be rubbing shoulders in the most productive way imaginable is mind blowing. Trailing behind for a final look, the granddaughters of Dresselhaus, a beloved scientist, described weekly lunches during which Dresselhaus would pull them to a window from where they would observe construction progress. She was so excited about the MIT.nano building, said Leora Cooper. She loved it and the future it brings.

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Inside MIT.nano - MIT News

Letters: Invest in science, tech, engineering and math at the ‘U’ – TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

INVESTING IN THE U

The University of Minnesota has been in the news recently for its cutting-edge research everything from nano-technology sponges to protect our water supply to tackling substance abuse. In addition to the great research work that is being done at the U of M, I wanted to call attention to its critical role of building our workforce for the future. I work for a medium-size Minnesota company that has grown dramatically over the last 10 years. We need a talented workforce to continue to grow and thrive. We continuously seek to hire strong and prepared college graduates who have backgrounds in K-12 education and information technology. My company and many other local companies depend on the state of Minnesota investing in the university to prepare our future workforce.

Currently, the U of M is requesting state funding to invest in the success of Minnesotas students. State funding will help improve graduation rates, reduce undergraduate debt, improve academic experiences and perhaps most importantly produce more Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) degree graduates.

Currently, the U of Ms STEM departments are under great pressure, as increasing numbers of highly qualified students compete to enroll in programs that are full to the brim. At the same time, Minnesota companies are struggling to find the information technology and other STEM employees they need. State funding can help expand those programs. In turn, investing in these programs will supply Minnesota companies with a talented and skilled workforce that our state needs to compete advancing our competitive edge nationally and internationally. I am just one of 24,796 alumni who live in Dakota County, and one of more than 550,000 alumni from the university system. We contribute to a thriving Minnesota every day. I strongly urge the Legislature to support the universitys request for funding for student success that will help our state respond to our significant workforce needs.

Sandy Wiese, Eagan

The writer, chair-elect of the University of Minnesota Alumni Association, is senior vice president of business development and government affairs for Data Recognition Corp.

President Trumps 2018 budget includes the elimination of the Corporation for National and Community Service. Eliminating CNCS and its core programs, including AmeriCorps and Senior Corps, would have a crippling impact on our community, devastating local organizations that leverage AmeriCorps and Senior Corps funding to engage citizens in service and to cultivate matching support from non-federal sources.

National service programs not only provide vital services to local residents here in St. Paul but also provide a pathway to employment for young Americans. Through their service, AmeriCorps members gain skills and experience, develop professional networks and earn an education award that can reduce the cost of college. I serve as a proud board member of the Minnesota Alliance With Youth, a statewide organization that supports AmeriCorps Promise Fellows and AmeriCorps VISTAs. In Congresswoman Betty McCollums district, 49 Promise Fellows are supporting 1,470 students. Last year, 91 percent of the students served increased their academic engagement.

AmeriCorps and Senior Corps have a history of bipartisan support. I am counting on Congresswoman McCollum and other members of Congress to continue that legacy of support for this cost-effective, results-driven resource for our community.

Damon Shoholm

The writer is director of James P. Shannon Leadership Institute at the Amherst H. Wilder Foundation and board co-chair of the Minnesota Alliance With Youth.

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Letters: Invest in science, tech, engineering and math at the 'U' - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

New Engineering and Science Building Nearing Completion – UConn Today

The Engineering and Science Building will open in the fall, with researchers moving in during the summer. (Sean Flynn/UConn Photo)

When UConns new Engineering and Science Building opens this fall, it will provide room for some of the universitys fastest growing research fields systems genomics, biomedical sciences, robotics, cyber-physical systems (think drones) and virtual reality technology.

The five-story building, under construction since September 2015, is approximately 75 percent complete, according to Brian Gore, UConns director of infrastructure and program management. Researchers will move in to the new space this summer, beginning in July.

Located behind Student Health Services and the Chemistry building in North Campus, the Engineering and Science Building will be the first structure on the Storrs campus to utilize an open lab concept for research. The shared research space and open floor plan is intended to make it easier for scientists from different disciplines to collaborate, fostering innovation.

The new structure also gives scientists access to a high-speed broadband network that delivers the capacity they need to process large amounts of data quickly a necessity in many research fields today.

Its exciting, says Professor Rachel ONeill, a molecular genetics scientist and director of UConns Center for Genome Innovation, which is moving into the new building. We hope this will increase the already vibrant synergy among these faculty and foster strong, productive collaborations and interactions.

Read about ONeills research here.

There will be plenty of opportunities for graduate students and students pursuing advanced degrees to conduct research in the new building. The Engineering and Science Buildings core mission is to support UConns role as a vital state resource, fueling Connecticuts economy with innovative technologies and highly skilled graduates, and helping to create high-paying jobs.

The School of Engineering occupies three of the five floors. The second and third floors will house UConns Institute for Systems Genomics and related programs.

The new building addresses a pressing need for space within the School of Engineering, where enrollment has doubled over the past decade. The school recently hired more than 30 faculty to expand its research efforts and teaching staff. In addition, UConns School of Engineering supports numerous partnerships with world-class manufacturers, such as General Electric, Pratt & Whitney, Fraunhofer, Comcast, and FEI.

Here is a breakdown of the buildings future tenants:

First Floor:

Robotics and Controls Lab. An advanced, interdisciplinary, engineering lab developing tools to improve the efficiency and safety of robots used in manufacturing and other industries.

Computational Design Lab. A virtual reality research lab advancing new haptic technologies (haptics is the science of applying touch sensation and control in human interactions with computers, e.g. vibrations in smart phones and video games) and gesture recognition technologies for 3-D applications.

Adaptive systems, Intelligence, and Mechantronics Lab and Laboratory of Intelligent Networks and Knowledge-perception Systems. These labs focus on the development of new technologies and sensors for adaptive and intelligent autonomous vehicles (e.g. drones) and other systems.

Manufacturing Systems Laboratory. This labs mission is to advance technologies toward the development of smart and green buildings that optimize energy consumption, conserve resources, and enhance efficiencies.

Second and Third Floors:

Institute for Systems Genomics. UConns premiere genomics research and training program. Includes faculty from multiple disciplines: molecular & cell biology, ecology and evolutionary biology, allied health sciences, and UConn Health. Offices for researchers from UConn Healths Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences will be included in this space, emphasizing the cross-campus collaborative nature of the research area.

Center for Genome Innovation. The core service and training center for UConns genomics and cytogenetics programs. The new space will feature some of the latest instrumentation for Next Generation genome sequencing, analysis, and genotyping. The CGI supports more than 120 labs at UConn campuses in Storrs, Farmington, and Avery Point and provides services for clients outside of UConn.

Microbial Analysis, Resources, and Services (MARS) This core facility assists researchers by performing microbiome, targeted amplicon, and small genome sequencing.

Computational Biology Core. This core group provides crucial computational power and technical support to UConn researchers and affiliates. The CBC is led by assistant professor Jill Wegrzyn, who recently helped decipher the largest genome sequenced and assembled to date the sugar pine tree.

Professional Science Masters in Genetic and Genomic Counseling programs. Affiliated with Allied Health Sciences, these new programs will teach students how to interpret genetic testing results, a rapidly growing aspect of health care.

Fourth Floor:

Cellular Mechanics Laboratory. This lab investigates how changes in the biomechanical properties of cells influence the onset and progression of sickle cell disease.

Biointegrated Materials and Devices at Nano- and Micro-scales. Research here focuses on the development of materials, devices, and systems at extremely small scale for applications in biomedicine.

Neuroengineering and Pain Research. This lab focuses on sensory coding and processing in the peripheral nervous system with a goal of developing Next Generation strategies and devices for better management of chronic pain.

Microelectromechanical systems for biomedical analysis. Researchers use nano- and micro-scale optical imaging and mechanical sensing for the biomedical analysis of cancer cells.

Smart Imaging. This labs core mission is the development of novel imaging and sensing tools to tackle measurement problems in biology, medicine, and metrology including lab-on-a-chip platforms.

Interdisciplinary Mechanics. This lab uses computational modeling and experimental testing to solve challenging problems in biomechanics and engineering related to soft biological tissues, new materials, and applications.

Fifth Floor:

Electrocatalysts and Fuels. Using electrochemistry, chemical engineering, and materials science, this lab designs and develops electroactive materials for use in such things as fuel cells and energy storage applications for batteries and supercapacitors.

Thermal Transport Physics. With a focus on thermal transport physics at the micro- and nano-scale, this lab investigates the engineering of materials at nanoscale for energy conversion and storage applications.

Advanced Solar Cells. This research group investigates novel nanoarchitectures for enhanced solar cells.

Advanced Fuels using Modified Zeolites. The development of new catalysts and sorbents for the production of clean energy and biofuels is the focus of this lab.

Process Design Simulation and Optimization. This lab uses model-assisted experimental design and process scaling to research processes that address the growing energy crisis and the environmental impact of energy production.

Computational Atmospheric Chemistry and Exposure. Addressing problems related to air pollution and atmospheric chemistry, this labs overarching mission is to bridge the gap between basic scientific knowledge of atmospheric pollutants and the tools policy makers rely on to develop air pollution strategies.

Process Systems and Operations Research. This lab uses modeling, simulations, and control algorithms to develop novel solutions to emerging problems in a wide array of industry applications ranging from water treatment and desalination to renewable energy and personalized medicine.

Membrane Separations. Researchers here are developing innovative materials and processes to advance technologies for water treatment, desalination, and reuse.

Read more about progress on constructing the building: Work to Start Soon on New Engineering Complex Construction Begins on New Engineering and Science Building UConn Marks Construction Milestone for New Engineering Complex

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New Engineering and Science Building Nearing Completion - UConn Today

Strength of hair inspires new materials for body armor – ScienceBlog.com (blog)

In a new study, researchers at the University of California San Diego investigate why hair is incredibly strong and resistant to breaking. The findings could lead to the development of new materials for body armor and help cosmetic manufacturers create better hair care products.

Hair has a strength to weight ratio comparable to steel. It can be stretched up to one and a half times its original length before breaking. We wanted to understand the mechanism behind this extraordinary property, said Yang (Daniel) Yu, a nanoengineering Ph.D. student at UC San Diego and the first author of the study.

Nature creates a variety of interesting materials and architectures in very ingenious ways. Were interested in understanding the correlation between the structure and the properties of biological materials to develop synthetic materials and designs based on nature that have better performance than existing ones, said Marc Meyers, a professor of mechanical engineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering and the lead author of the study.

In a study published online in Dec. in the journal Materials Science and Engineering C, researchers examined at the nanoscale level how a strand of human hair behaves when it is deformed, or stretched. The team found that hair behaves differently depending on how fast or slow it is stretched. The faster hair is stretched, the stronger it is. Think of a highly viscous substance like honey, Meyers explained. If you deform it fast it becomes stiff, but if you deform it slowly it readily pours.

Hair consists of two main parts the cortex, which is made up of parallel fibrils, and the matrix, which has an amorphous (random) structure. The matrix is sensitive to the speed at which hair is deformed, while the cortex is not. The combination of these two components, Yu explained, is what gives hair the ability to withstand high stress and strain.

And as hair is stretched, its structure changes in a particular way. At the nanoscale, the cortex fibrils in hair are each made up of thousands of coiled spiral-shaped chains of molecules called alpha helix chains. As hair is deformed, the alpha helix chains uncoil and become pleated sheet structures known as beta sheets. This structural change allows hair to handle up a large amount deformation without breaking.

This structural transformation is partially reversible. When hair is stretched under a small amount of strain, it can recover its original shape. Stretch it further, the structural transformation becomes irreversible. This is the first time evidence for this transformation has been discovered, Yu said.

Hair is such a common material with many fascinating properties, said Bin Wang, a UC San Diego PhD alumna and co-author on the paper. Wang is now at the Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology in China continuing research on hair.

The team also conducted stretching tests on hair at different humidity levels and temperatures. At higher humidity levels, hair can withstand up to 70 to 80 percent deformation before breaking. Water essentially softens hair it enters the matrix and breaks the sulfur bonds connecting the filaments inside a strand of hair. Researchers also found that hair starts to undergo permanent damage at 60 degrees Celsius (140 degrees Fahrenheit). Beyond this temperature, hair breaks faster at lower stress and strain.

Since I was a child I always wondered why hair is so strong. Now I know why, said Wen Yang, a former postdoctoral researcher in Meyers research group and co-author on the paper.

The team is currently conducting further studies on the effects of water on the properties of human hair. Moving forward, the team is investigating the detailed mechanism of how washing hair causes it to return to its original shape.

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Strength of hair inspires new materials for body armor - ScienceBlog.com (blog)

Tatas Learn Key Lesson As Nano Heads For Sunset: Indians Want … – Swarajya

After eight years and a sustained failure to set hearts racing, the Tata Nano, it seems, is set to drive into the sunset. A Times of India report says that Tata Motors will phase out the Nano in three to four years so that it can cut out the multiplicity of car platforms from the current six to just two.

If this happens, it will be both a vindication of ousted Tata Sons chairman Cyrus Mistry, and a partial rejection of his stand that the Nano was being kept alive only for emotional reasons. His reference was to the fact that the Nano was Ratan Tatas pet Rs 1 lakh car project, a car which was supposed to upgrade millions from thinking two-wheelers to four-wheelers.

A day after he was ousted, Mistry said in a note leaked to the media that the Nano had consistently lost money, peaking at Rs 1,000 crore As there is no line of profitability for the Nano; any turnaround strategy for the company (Tata Motors) requires to shut it down. Emotional reasons alone have kept us away from this crucial decision.

But he has been proved wrong in his assumption that emotional reasons will keep the Nano running, as the decision by the Tata Motors management to phase it out along with the Sumo show.

The failure of the Nano, unveiled with much fanfare amidst global spotlight, can primarily be put down to Tatas mistake in presuming that price was crucial to weaning people away from two-wheelers to cheap cars.

This is a mistake many marketers make: they confuse the average Indians need for affordability to a willingness to buy products that come cheap.

Far from it. As Dheeraj Sinha wrote in his book India Reloaded, the average Indians idea of a car was built around the roomy Ambassador. He may not be able to afford a car, but his idea of a car is not something with all the essentials removed from it. Quite the contrary. He want the addition of desirable features. A car is a status enhancer, and the last thing Indians want is to look cheap. A second-hand car that is cheaper than the Nano would work for most Indians better than a car that has cheap written all over it. The Nano was tomtommed as the worlds cheapest car, and so the Indian lumped it.

Consider the contrast with Renaults Kwid, another car inspired by the idea of frugal engineering. Far from looking cheap, it tries to resemble a mini SUV. And, after selling over 100,000 Kwids, Renault is making money on it.

Phasing the Nano out shows that Ratan Tata has learnt to bite the bullet. The new Tata cars, built around style and better performance, are doing much better than the old models.

Tata Motors has outgrown Nano thinking.

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Tatas Learn Key Lesson As Nano Heads For Sunset: Indians Want ... - Swarajya

Bendable Phone Advances With New Flexible, Ultrafast Memory – Android Headlines

The University of Exeter has been working on new multilevel, flexible, ultrafast memory devices, and this would be a significant advance in the development of devices such as bendable phones, televisions, and even smart clothing. Engineering talents have detailed small but high-capacity memories that will be ideal for flexible devices including smartphones. Additionally, these new transparent memory devices will be both eco-friendly and cheap to produce, so could be a credible and more affordable to flash memory that is currently used in graphics cards, memory cards, and USB drives.

Research about this endeavor has been published in ACS Nano, a scientific journal. The new development regards a nano-scale, non-volatile fusion of graphene oxide and titanium oxide, and the team behind the new memory devices suggest that it signifies an evolution for flexible electronics with improved power, speed, and endurance. Lead author of the research paper, Professor David Wright, described the new GO-based memory option. Its capable of being written to and read from in less than five nanoseconds and is just eight nanometers thick and 50 nanometers long. When discussing the results the research paper says it will help transform the way in which we view the potential and possibilities for GO memory device development and applications. In the event that this type of new memory could be produced in high enough yields, it could mean the end of flash memory in electronic devices.

Its not the first time graphene oxide has been used in the production of memory devices. However, previously the results had been slow and cumbersome, and thus more suited to the economy end of the device market. The research is in the early stages and it could be quite some time before the ultra fast, flexible memory is ready for mass production. In recent years many smartphone companies including LG, Microsoft, and Samsung have invested resources into flexible devices, and these and other manufacturers are likely to be following further developments involving flexible memory very closely. As far as the much-rumored Samsung Galaxy X foldable phone is concerned, it was previously thought that production might begin in Q3 or Q4 this year. However, recent news inferred there were production and technical issues, and that the companys first foldable smartphone launch is more likely to occur next year.

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Bendable Phone Advances With New Flexible, Ultrafast Memory - Android Headlines

CVTC Manufacturing Show showcases opportunities, technology – Leader-Telegram

Cole Hill knows what he wants to do in a future career.

I want to build motors V-8s probably, said the Colfax High School junior who spends time racing at the Red Cedar and Jim Falls tracks.

But just what does one study to prepare to build big engines? Hunter Sullivan of Chippewa Falls, a Chippewa Valley Technical College machine tooling technics student, had some ideas for him at CVTCs annual Manufacturing Show on March 2.

He told me about their CNC (computerized numerical control) machines and the careers, said Hill, who thinks he will eventually enroll at CVTC but he is unsure which program he will choose. I havent looked at any other places.

Introducing people like Hill to careers in manufacturing is a big part of CVTCs Manufacturing Show, which attracted about 1,600 people to CVTCs Manufacturing Education Center. Wonders of modern manufacturing were displayed and demonstrated in CVTC programs, including automation engineering technology, industrial mechanical, machine tooling technics, welding/welding fabrication and manufacturing, nano and industrial engineering programs.

About 40 manufacturing companies were also represented, with display tables highlighting their products and job opportunities.

Sullivan, a 2015 Chippewa Falls Senior High School graduate, connected with Hill as another young man who likes to work with his hands. I just like making things, Sullivan said. I took shop classes in high school with manual lathes and I thought that was pretty cool. But what I learn here is way more than they teach you in high school.

Sullivan is already working in manufacturing, doing some part-time laser cutting work at Riverside Machine. Im not doing CNC work, but hopefully when I finish school they will keep me on as a machinist, he said.

Visitors to the Manufacturing Show were able to take part in hands-on activities, such as trying their hand at welding, building a tiny flashlight with the help of manufacturing engineering technologist students, or playing with projects like a billiards game made by automation engineering technology students.

This is an opportunity to show off new technology, said CVTC dean of manufacturing Jeff Sullivan. The Manufacturing Show brings together alumni and people in the area, and shows off student projects. Our manufacturing partners come in and show the things theyre doing.

More opportunity

Several area high schools sent bus loads of students to the event. They toured local manufacturing companies prior to the show. Other students came on their own, or with their parents.

Menomonie resident Tim Frank, a CVTC graduate, attended the event with his wife and son, Nathan.

Hes interested in coming here next year, Frank said of his son. Hes working at a machine shop in Menomonie after school now. He saw this show was available and asked to come.

I really havent decided what program to take, Nathan Frank said. But it will probably be something in the machining area. Its making stuff. Its hands-on.

Dawn Schrankler and her husband brought their daughter, Kelsey, from Neillsville to the show. Were trying to get her interested in more of a selection, said Schrankler. She wants to be a veterinarian assistant, but were trying to broaden her horizons and open her eyes to other areas.

Not all of the people attending the show to explore careers were high school students or even recent high school graduates. Some seeking to change careers found plenty of older CVTC students who have followed a similar path.

This program is fantastic, said Casey Schellhorn, an student in CVTCs automation engineering technology program who graduated from River Falls High School in 2010. I wanted more opportunity than I had working in food service. I was looking for something interesting and found this on the CVTC website.

Schellhorn was stationed where he could explain to visitors how to play a miniature billiards game and also the pneumatics, electronics and sensors that made the game work. Other students were at the event to explain what they do, what they are learning, and the exciting opportunities available to them in manufacturing careers.

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CVTC Manufacturing Show showcases opportunities, technology - Leader-Telegram

Stretchy electrode paves way for flexible electronics | Stanford News – Stanford University News

The brain is soft and electronics are stiff, which can make combining the two challenging, such as when neuroscientists implant electrodes to measure brain activity and perhaps deliver tiny jolts of electricity for pain relief or other purposes.

Go to the web site to view the video.

Courtesy Bao Research Group

A robotic test instrument stretches over a curved surface a nearly transparent, flexible electrode based on a special plastic developed in the lab of Stanford chemical engineer Zhenan Bao.

Chemical engineer Zhenan Bao is trying to change that. For more than a decade, her lab has been working to make electronics soft and flexible so that they feel and operate almost like a second skin. Along the way, the team has started to focus on making brittle plastics that can conduct electricity more elastic.

Now in Science Advances, Baos team describes how they took one such brittle plastic and modified it chemically to make it as bendable as a rubber band, while slightly enhancing its electrical conductivity. The result is a soft, flexible electrode that is compatible with our supple and sensitive nerves.

This flexible electrode opens up many new, exciting possibilities down the road for brain interfaces and other implantable electronics, said Bao, a professor of chemical engineering. Here, we have a new material with uncompromised electrical performance and high stretchability.

The material is still a laboratory prototype, but the team hopes to develop it as part of their long-term focus on creating flexible materials that interface with the human body.

Electrodes are fundamental to electronics. Conducting electricity, these wires carry back and forth signals that allow different components in a device to work together. In our brains, special thread-like fibers called axons play a similar role, transmitting electric impulses between neurons. Baos stretchable plastic is designed to make a more seamless connection between the stiff world of electronics and the flexible organic electrodes in our bodies.

A printed electrode pattern of the new polymer being stretched to several times of its original length (top), and a transparent, highly stretchy electronic skin patch forming an intimate interface with the human skin to potentially measure various biomarkers (bottom). (Image credit: Bao Lab)

One thing about the human brain that a lot of people dont know is that it changes volume throughout the day, says postdoctoral research fellow Yue Wang, the first author on the paper. It swells and deswells. The current generation of electronic implants cant stretch and contract with the brain and make it complicated to maintain a good connection.

If we have an electrode with a similar softness as the brain, it will form a better interface, said Wang.

To create this flexible electrode, the researchers began with a plastic that had two essential qualities: high conductivity and biocompatibility, meaning that it could be safely brought into contact with the human body. But this plastic had a shortcoming: It was very brittle. Stretching it even 5 percent would break it.

As Bao and her team sought to preserve conductivity while adding flexibility, they worked with scientists at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory to use a special type of X-ray to study this material at the molecular level. All plastics are polymers; that is, chains of molecules strung together like beads. The plastic in this experiment was actually made up of two different polymers that were tightly wound together. One was the electrical conductor. The other polymer was essential to the process of making the plastic. When these two polymers combined they created a plastic that was like a string of brittle, sphere-like structures. It was conductive, but not flexible.

The researchers hypothesized that if they could find the right molecular additive to separate these two tightly wound polymers, they could prevent this crystallization and give the plastic more stretch. But they had to be careful adding material to a conductor usually weakens its ability to transmit electrical signals.

After testing more than 20 different molecular additives, they finally found one that did the trick. It was a molecule similar to the sort of additives used to thicken soups in industrial kitchens. This additive transformed the plastics chunky and brittle molecular structure into a fishnet pattern with holes in the strands to allow the material to stretch and deform. When they tested their new materials elasticity, they were delighted to find that it became slightly more conductive when stretched to twice its original length. The plastic remained very conductive even when stretched 800 percent its original length.

We thought that if we add insulating material, we would get really poor conductivity, especially when we added so much, said Bao. But thanks to their precise understanding of how to tune the molecular assembly, the researchers got the best of both worlds: the highest possible conductivity for the plastic while at the same transforming it into a very robust and stretchy substance.

By understanding the interaction at the molecular level, we can develop electronics that are soft and stretchy like skin, while remaining conductive, Wang says.

Other authors include postdoctoral fellows Chenxin Zhu, Francisco Molina-Lopez, Franziska Lissel and Jia Liu; graduate students Shucheng Chen and Noelle I. Rabiah; Hongping Yan and Michael F. Toney, staff scientists at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory; Christian Linder, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering who is also a member of Stanford Bio-X and of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute; Boris Murmann, a professor of electrical engineering and a member of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute; Lihua Jin, now an assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles; Zheng Chen, now an assistant professor of nano engineering at the University of California, San Diego; and colleagues from the Materials Science Institute of Barcelona, Spain, and Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology.

This work was funded by Samsung Electronics and the Air Force Office of Science Research.

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Stretchy electrode paves way for flexible electronics | Stanford News - Stanford University News