Ninth Annual "Livingston Nanotechnology Conference" December 11-13 in Midtown ManhattanNew York ‘s largest and longest …

MENAFN - Investors Ideas - 19/12/2013

New York, New York - December 11, 2013 (www.investorideas.com newswire) Livingston Securities announces the 9th annual "Livingston Nanotechnology Conference" is being held from December 11-13 in Midtown Manhattan. This is New York 's largest and longest running gathering of investors, entrepreneurs and innovators interested in disruptive technologies.

Some highlights of this year's conference include:

Scott LIvingston, Chief Executive Officer of Livingston Securities, said "We were founded in 2008 with three goals in mind: Finance the Nanotechnology Revolution (in all industries), change the way that innovation is financed on Wall Street, and connect you with your local innovation economy. 2013 has been a great year of change for innovators, entrepreneurs and those who finance them. We are excited to cap off this year with our best client and investor conference yet.

You can learn more about Livingston Securities by visiting http://www.livingstonsecurities.com

To learn more about our investor conference series and be added to our distribution list for future invitations please contact: Media@livingstonsecurities.com

Jonathan Mason

Tim Serignese

Jordan Calabrese

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Ninth Annual "Livingston Nanotechnology Conference" December 11-13 in Midtown ManhattanNew York 's largest and longest ...

Chinese government officials tour SBCCD Center at EDCT

Seventeen high ranking Chinese Government officials toured the Center for the Advancement of Nanotechnology at the Economic Development and Corporate Training (EDCT) Division of the San Bernardino Community College District (SBCCD) on Dec. 3 after being welcomed by the EDCT Executive Director Dr. Matthew Isaac. Isaac also provided the group with a presentation on Science and Technology and Nanotechnology.

Hosted by the FCC Group International, Inc., the group included heads and representatives of many departments and administrations within the Chinese government.

In 2011, the EDCT was visited by fourteen visitors from Beijing, China. The Center for the Advancement of Nanotechnology has become a regular stop on economic development and advanced science tours of California by corporate and government officials from China.

Nanotechnology is the science of manipulating materials at the atomic level to design and manufacture new and better materials and products. One nanometer equals one billionth of one meter. A sheet of paper is about 100,000 nanometers thick.

This is the revolutionary new manufacturing process and not a single technology.

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Chinese government officials tour SBCCD Center at EDCT

Sponsored post: A nanosolution eliminates the danger of tiny tin whiskers

5 hours ago Dec. 20, 2013 - 8:55 AM PST

Several years ago, manufacturers set out to rid electronics of hazardous materials by removing lead from solder. Unfortunately, the tin-based, lead-free solder became prone to a detrimental phenomenon known as tin whiskers, microscopic metal growths on soldering points of a circuit board that often lead to short circuits.

Using his research at Lockheed Martins Advanced Technology Center in Palo Alto, Calif., where nanotechnology development effortswere under way, Dr. Alfred Zinn was able to help find a tin whiskers solution.

It is amazing that we can now employ nanotechnology and break fundamental boundaries that we previously thought to be physical constants, said Dr. Zinn.

During his research, he found that using CuantumFuse, a printable nanocopper paste, could help achieve the desired processing temperature for electronic assembly.

Since solder is a low-cost commodity item and can only be replaced by a competitive product,Lockheed Martin created a synthesis process that allows for fast and affordable production of CuantumFuse. Replacing tin-based solder with pure copper solder offers several benefits: much greater thermal and electrical conductivity, the elimination of the danger from whiskers and improved product performance by an order of magnitude once fully developed.

CuantumFuse is a true revolution that offers high reliability and a lead-free solution for a wide variety of commercial and government applications, said Dr. Ken Washington, the VP of Advanced Technology Center. This innovative use of nanotechnology opens a breadth of opportunities in the automobile and medical industries, electronic cooling and others.

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Sponsored post: A nanosolution eliminates the danger of tiny tin whiskers

SUNY CNSE’s Dr. Sara Brenner discusses nanotechnology applications at the 2014 Olympic games – Video


SUNY CNSE #39;s Dr. Sara Brenner discusses nanotechnology applications at the 2014 Olympic games
As the SUNY College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE) hosted the 2013 "NANOlympics," participants learned about the role nanotechnology will play a...

By: TheNanoCollege

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SUNY CNSE's Dr. Sara Brenner discusses nanotechnology applications at the 2014 Olympic games - Video

UCLA Nanotechnology Researchers Prove Two-Step Method for Potential Pancreatic Cancer Treatment

Newswise A new method of microscopic drug delivery that could greatly improve the treatment of deadly pancreatic cancer has been proven to work in mice at UCLAs Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The research team led by Drs. Andre Nel, professor of nanomedicine and member of the California Nanosystems Institute (CNSI), and Huan Meng, adjunct assistant professor of nanomedicine, published the results of their study in the journal ACS Nano online ahead of print and featured in the November 2013 print issue.

Pancreatic cancer (pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma or PDAC) is a deadly disease that is nearly impossible to detect until it is in the advanced stage. Treatment options for it are very limited in number and suffer low success rates. The need for innovative and improved treatment of pancreatic cancer cannot be overstated, as its diagnosis over the years has often remained synonymous with a death sentence.

In the pancreas, PDAC tumors consist of cancer cells that are surrounded by other structural elements called stroma. The stroma can be made of many substances, such as connective tissue and pericytes, which block the access of standard chemotherapy in tumor blood vessels from efficiently reaching the cancer cells. These elements can reduce the effectiveness of the treatment.

The dual-wave nanotherapy method employed by Drs. Nel and Meng in their research uses two different kinds of microscopic particles (nanoparticles) intravenously injected in a rapid sequence into the vein of the tumor-bearing mouse. The first wave of nanoparticles carries a substance that removes the pericytes vascular gates to access the pancreatic cancer cells and the second wave carries the chemotherapy drug that kills the cancer cells.

Drs. Nel and Meng and their colleagues Dr. Jeffrey Zink, UCLA professor of chemistry and biochemistry and Dr. Jeffrey Brinker, University of New Mexico professor of chemical and nuclear engineering, sought to contain chemotherapy in nanoparticles that could more directly target pancreatic cancer cells, but they needed to find a way for those nanoparticles to get through the sites of vascular obstruction caused by the pericytes, which restricts access to the cancer cells. Through experimentation they discovered they could interfere with a cellular signaling pathway (the communication mechanism between cells) that governs the pericyte attraction to the tumor blood vessels. By making nanoparticles that effectively bind a high load of the signaling pathway inhibitor, they developed a first wave of nanoparticles that separates the pericytes from the endothelial cells (on the blood vessel). This opens the vascular gate for the next wave of nanoparticles, which carry the chemotherapeutic agent to the cancer cells inside the tumor.

To test this two-wave nanotherapy, the researchers used immuno-compromised mice that were used to grow human pancreatic tumors (called xenografts) under the mouse skin. With the two-wave method, the xenograft tumors had a significantly higher rate of shrinkage compared to those exposed to chemotherapy given the standard way as a free drug or carried in nanoparticles without first wave treatment.

This two-wave nanotherapy is an existing example of how we seek to improve the delivery of chemotherapy drugs to their intended targets using nanotechnology to provide an engineered approach, said Nel, chief of the division of nanomedicine. It shows how the physical and chemical principles of nanotechnology can be integrated with the biological sciences to help cancer patients by increasing the effectiveness of chemotherapy while also reducing side effects and toxicity. This two-wave treatment approach can also address biological impediments in nanotherapies for other types of cancer.

This research was funded by the U.S. Public Health Service and the National Cancer Institute.

UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has more than 240 researchers and clinicians engaged in disease research, prevention, detection, control, treatment and education. One of the nation's largest comprehensive cancer centers, the Jonsson center is dedicated to promoting research and translating basic science into leading-edge clinical studies. In July 2013, the Jonsson Cancer Center was named among the top 12 cancer centers nationwide by U.S. News & World Report, a ranking it has held for 14 consecutive years. For more information on the Jonsson Cancer Center, visit our website at http://www.cancer.ucla.edu.

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UCLA Nanotechnology Researchers Prove Two-Step Method for Potential Pancreatic Cancer Treatment

Nanotechnology researchers prove two-step method for potential pancreatic cancer treatment

Nov. 13, 2013 A new method of microscopic drug delivery that could greatly improve the treatment of deadly pancreatic cancer has been proven to work in mice at UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The research team led by Drs. Andre Nel, professor of nanomedicine and member of the California Nanosystems Institute (CNSI), and Huan Meng, adjunct assistant professor of nanomedicine, published the results of their study in the journal ACS Nano online ahead of print and featured in the November 2013 print issue.

Pancreatic cancer (pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma or PDAC) is a deadly disease that is nearly impossible to detect until it is in the advanced stage. Treatment options for it are very limited in number and suffer low success rates. The need for innovative and improved treatment of pancreatic cancer cannot be overstated, as its diagnosis over the years has often remained synonymous with a death sentence.

In the pancreas, PDAC tumors consist of cancer cells that are surrounded by other structural elements called stroma. The stroma can be made of many substances, such as connective tissue and pericytes, which block the access of standard chemotherapy in tumor blood vessels from efficiently reaching the cancer cells. These elements can reduce the effectiveness of the treatment.

The dual-wave nanotherapy method employed by Drs. Nel and Meng in their research uses two different kinds of microscopic particles (nanoparticles) intravenously injected in a rapid sequence into the vein of the tumor-bearing mouse. The first wave of nanoparticles carries a substance that removes the pericytes' vascular gates to access the pancreatic cancer cells and the second wave carries the chemotherapy drug that kills the cancer cells.

Drs. Nel and Meng and their colleagues Dr. Jeffrey Zink, UCLA professor of chemistry and biochemistry and Dr. Jeffrey Brinker, University of New Mexico professor of chemical and nuclear engineering, sought to contain chemotherapy in nanoparticles that could more directly target pancreatic cancer cells, but they needed to find a way for those nanoparticles to get through the sites of vascular obstruction caused by the pericytes, which restricts access to the cancer cells. Through experimentation they discovered they could interfere with a cellular signaling pathway (the communication mechanism between cells) that governs the pericyte attraction to the tumor blood vessels. By making nanoparticles that effectively bind a high load of the signaling pathway inhibitor, they developed a first wave of nanoparticles that separates the pericytes from the endothelial cells (on the blood vessel). This opens the vascular gate for the next wave of nanoparticles, which carry the chemotherapeutic agent to the cancer cells inside the tumor.

To test this two-wave nanotherapy, the researchers used immuno-compromised mice that were used to grow human pancreatic tumors (called xenografts) under the mouse skin. With the two-wave method, the xenograft tumors had a significantly higher rate of shrinkage compared to those exposed to chemotherapy given the standard way as a free drug or carried in nanoparticles without first wave treatment.

"This two-wave nanotherapy is an existing example of how we seek to improve the delivery of chemotherapy drugs to their intended targets using nanotechnology to provide an engineered approach," said Nel, chief of the division of nanomedicine. "It shows how the physical and chemical principles of nanotechnology can be integrated with the biological sciences to help cancer patients by increasing the effectiveness of chemotherapy while also reducing side effects and toxicity. This two-wave treatment approach can also address biological impediments in nanotherapies for other types of cancer."

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Nanotechnology researchers prove two-step method for potential pancreatic cancer treatment

Iran€™s 2nd Proposed Int€™l Standard on Nanotechnology Approved

technology Approved -->

TEHRAN (FNA)- 'Determination of muramic acid as a biomarker for silver nanoparticles activity' standard which was proposed three years ago by Standardization Committee of Iran Nanotechnology Initiative Council to the Nanotechnology International Standardization Committee (ISO/TC229) was approved in the final stage of voting (DTS stage) and will be published in the near future.

The compilation and development of the standard began three years ago by a university team with the support of Iran Nanotechnology Initiative Council by carrying out laboratorial research. During these years, various experts from different countries were introduced to supervise the compilation of the standard. The suggestions of the experts were evaluated and approved by the project supervisor of the proposed standard. A new method has been presented in the standard, which can quantitatively and precisely determine the activity of silver nanoparticles. The standard can be used for the determination of antibacterial properties of products based on silver nanoparticles. Only a number of countries, including the US, Britain, China, South Korea, Germany, France, Japan, and Iran, have so far succeeded in the compilation of a standard in Nanotechnology International Standardization Committee (ISO/TC229). Another standard entitled 'Definitions for the evaluation of science, technology, and innovation indices' is currently being compiled in ISO under the supervision of Iran.

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Iran€™s 2nd Proposed Int€™l Standard on Nanotechnology Approved

Tricorder-like Mobile Phones Enabled by Nanotechnology

Your typical mobile phone userwho may be cursing his or her smart phone because the battery runs out after just a few hours of normal usagemay not be thinking: What this phone really needs is a spectrometer built into it. But if they knew what spectrometers could do, they might change their minds.

How about a smart phone that you could wave over the fruit and vegetables at the grocery store in order to determine whether they are ripe? Thats the kind of Star Trek Tricorder, gee-whiz technology that gets people to buy a smart phone.

Researchers at the Technische Universitt Dresden and the Fraunhofer Institute for Electron Beam and Plasma Technology in Germany have developed a technology that could enable exactly that kind of capability. The German researchers have created a novel, miniature spectrometer, enabled by metallic nano-antennas, small enough to fit onto a mobile phone.

In addition to checking on the ripeness of produce, it could also serve in a more critical role as a tool for diabetes patients to monitor their blood-sugar levels. Of course, using nanotechnology to make your mobile phone into a portable medical monitor is not a new concept. But what distinguishes this latest research out of Germany is that the thin-film manufacturing technique employed makes the spectrometer sensor compatible with mass production.

Even if you could shrink a spectrometerwhich measures light over a specific portion of the electromagnetic spectrumto its smallest physical dimensions using conventional techniques and have it still work, it would not fit onto a mobile phone. The trick employed by the German researchers is the use of metallic nanowires that serve as nano-antennas to absorb, amplify and redirect the light onto the light detectora CCD/CMOS chip that houses the antenna array. This makes it possible to miniaturize the spectrometer to a scale never conceived of before. The only limit to the size of the spectrometer is how small you could make the CCD/CMOS chip.

The three-year-long research project, dubbed "nanoSPECS", began in August of this year. Naturally, it is still at a preliminary stage, but the researchers expect that by the end of the project, they will be able to manufacture the graded antenna-array to the 8-wafer size.

If the German researchers are successful, at that point you will have a smart phone that you can wave over a plum or canteloupe to pick the best, and you might even have a way to power the phone so that it would last as long as a Tricorder.

Image: Fraunhofer

IEEE Spectrums nanotechnology blog, featuring news and analysis about the development, applications, and future of science and technology at the nanoscale.

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Tricorder-like Mobile Phones Enabled by Nanotechnology

Olympic games meet nanotechnology

Albany

With Olympic athletes looking for any edge to lead them to gold, nanotechnology has made its way into the games.

On Saturday, the NanOlympics at the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering gave visitors a chance to see where nanotechnology will be featured at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi in February and how it could give athletes the edge they need for gold.

The event was part of "Nanovember," a month of seminars, demonstrations and interactive community events at the college. "Nanovember is an opportunity to demonstrate how nanotechnology has become pervasive across society," CNSE spokesman Steve Janack said.

Saturday's event featured a presentation and chances for children and adults to experience winter sports that use nanotechnology. For example, there was an opportunity for those in attendance to measure the speed of their shots in hockey. Nanotechnology is used in hockey sticks to make them more impact resistant.

There was also a group of video games that allowed participants to try their hands at sports like skiing and the biathlon, as well as a station set up for curling. For curling, adjusting the microscopic roughness of a curling stone affects its curl, while in the biathlon a sport that combines target shooting with cross-country skiing a nano-coating can be applied to the skis to give them better grip and glide, and poles can be made lighter and stronger with nano-carbon material.

Though open to anyone, Janack said the NanOlympics and Nanovember events especially offer young people a chance to discover what nanotechnology is about.

"It gives young people a chance to see what the future holds, both from an educational standpoint and from a career standpoint," he said.

Among the young people Saturday was Elijah Tillah of Long Island, who was visiting the college with his parents.

Not only did the teen also have an opportunity to tour the college, Tillah said it was cool to see the practical applications of nanotechnology.

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Olympic games meet nanotechnology

Nanotechnology Offers Potential to Predict Football Concussions

American football is a collision sport. And one consequence of repeated collisions between players is concussions. Science is starting to draw a link between these so-called mild brain injuries and the long-term effects they have on the playersnamely the onset of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative condition believed to be caused by head trauma and linked to depression and dementia. Recently, the issue has come to a head with the deaths of several former star players and the broadcast of the Frontline report League of Denial, which chronicles scientists' long struggle to convince NFL officials to recognize a link between concussions and CTE.

While the NFL has tried to institute rules aimed at limiting the number of concussions that players suffer, the new regulations dont seem to have stemmed the tide of brain injuries. Each week, a slew of player concussions are reported.

Another avenue being pursued in the hopes of limiting player concussions is the engineering of better helmets to improve head protection. An IEEE Spectrum article published last year, Ratings for Football Helmets Help Improve Player SafetyBut Not Before Another Tragedy, reported on efforts to measure the effectiveness of different football helmets in reducing head trauma and categorize them based on their efficacy.

Now researchers at Brigham Young University have taken this measurement of helmet impact one step further with immediate, real-time measurements of each hit that a player endures. From those measurements, which are communicated immediately to a hand-held device, coaches know whether a collision is capable of inducing a concussion, even if the player denies any problem. A description of the technology is provided in the video below.

A coach will know within seconds exactly how hard their player just got hit, said Jake Merrell, a student at BYU who developed the technology, in a press release. Even if a player pops up and acts fine, the folks on the sidelines will have data showing that maybe he isnt OK.

The heart of the technology is smart foam enabled by nanoparticles, which Merrell has dubbed ExoNanoFoam. The nano-enabled foam behaves as a piezoelectric in which pressure on the material produces an electrical voltage. A microcontroller sensor in the helmet reads the electrical voltage produced by the foam, and sends a signal to a handheld tablet equipped with a program that interprets it and delivers real-time information on the seriousness of the hit sustained by the player.

Since the foam is actually in contact with the player's head, it provides a more accurate measurement of the forces upon the players head than the accelerometers that have been used previously to measure these impacts. The drawback with accelerometers is that they measure only of the acceleration or deceleration of the players helmet.

Merrell intends to submit his prototype to the upcoming Head Health Challenge, which aims to develop new technologies for measuring impacts in real-time in order to improve player safety.

Photo: Brigham Young University

IEEE Spectrums nanotechnology blog, featuring news and analysis about the development, applications, and future of science and technology at the nanoscale.

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Nanotechnology Offers Potential to Predict Football Concussions

NanoBio Systems Successfully Measures Glucose in Saliva Using Nanotechnology-Based Sensor

MARION, MA--(Marketwired - Nov 7, 2013) - NanoBio Systems (NBS), a medical sensor startup company, announces the successful measurement of glucose in saliva of human test subjects using a disposable nanotechnology-based sensor platform and simple, portable electronics. Limited testing has demonstrated excellent correlation with both handheld commercial glucometers and sophisticated laboratory instruments well within the FDA's required measurement tolerances.

This breakthrough could put pain-free glucose testing within the reach of every diabetic and practitioner.

The patent-pending sensor is formed using a small nanotechnology platform matched to widely accepted and FDA-approved common enzyme chemistry. The enzyme is an oxido-reductase that catalyzes the oxidation of glucose, which is then sensed by the nanotechnology platform. Plans are underway to conduct broader clinical trials prior to seeking FDA approval as a screening and monitoring device.

NBS is a technology development company pursuing innovative, proven applied engineering solutions to develop biochemical sensors for personal health care monitoring.

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NanoBio Systems Successfully Measures Glucose in Saliva Using Nanotechnology-Based Sensor

lux utilis luxutilis nanotechnologie nanotechnology Samsung Flexible Display – Video


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lux utilis luxutilis nanotechnologie nanotechnology Samsung Flexible Display - Video

(5) Nanotechnologie Nanotechnology Led Nouvelles technologies New Technologys – Video


(5) Nanotechnologie Nanotechnology Led Nouvelles technologies New Technologys
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