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Nanoshells May Be Key To Next Wave Of Light-Based Technology
September 10, 1998 Nano-sized metal spheres may be the key to the next wave of light-based technologies. Rice University researchers, led by Naomi Halas, professor of electrical and computer engineering, developed ... > full story -
NYU Researchers Develop Simple, Predictable And Precise Technique For Arranging DNA Molecules Into Two-Dimensional Crystals
August 14, 1998 A team of researchers led by New York University chemist Nadrian C. Seeman, in collaboration with California Institute of Technology computer scientist Erik Winfree, has developed a simple, ... > full story -
Carbon-36 Fullerenes Could Be Higher-Temperature Superconductor
July 24, 1998 A team of theorists at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, whose calculations motivated the successful synthesis of materials based on carbon-36 fullerenes, has ... > full story -
Sapphire Semiconductors? Gem-Like Material May Promise Faster, Smaller, More Reliable Circuits, UD Prof Says
July 14, 1998 Alumina-better known as sapphire or ruby in its mineral form-may promise faster, smaller, more reliable computer circuits. University of Delaware researchers have developed a new technique that ... > full story -
Simple Polymer Moves With Electricity
July 1, 1998 A material originally developed for clear plastic bags may some day be used for artificial muscles, skin and organs that move like the real thing, according to a team of Penn State materials ... > full story -
From Sunscreen To Semiconductors: New Chemistry For Building Better Polymers
July 1, 1998 Bullet-proof cashmere? Well, maybe not. But Michigan Tech Associate Professor of chemical engineering Gerard Caneba's new polymer process has investors looking at building all kinds of new ... > full story -
Tiny Computers Of Carbon? Nanotubes That Conduct Huge Currents Without Heating Could Be Basis For New Electronics
June 18, 1998 A report published in the June 12 issue of the journal Science moves researchers one step closer to a practical application for electron wave effects in extremely small-scale circuits. ... > full story -
Polish Dumpling-Like Particle Has Potential In Drug Delivery
May 22, 1998 Chemists at Washington University in St. Louis have created synthetic polymer particles that are as cute as dumplings. They're called knedels (k-ned-l), after a popular Polish dumpling filled ... > full story -
Explaining How "Oil And Water" Mix In Superconductors May Lead To Practical Applications, Lucent Scientists Report
May 19, 1998 Lucent Technologies researchers have discovered how magnetic particles can live peacefully within a unique class of superconducting materials. This finding, reported in the May 21 cover article in ... > full story -
From Synagogues To Security Devices, New Optical Design Casts A Different Light
April 12, 1998 A mechanical engineer at Washington University in St. Louis who contemplated solving an old problem in his synagogue has literally harnessed light and reflection to enhance prayer and the synagogue ... > full story -
UD Computer News: Lone Glowing Molecule Points Out 'Potholes'
April 7, 1998 Like the flashing yellow sign on a road under construction, glowing molecular markers might help computer-chip makers avoid 'potholes' on super-flat blueprinting materials, a University of ... > full story -
Buckyballs Bouncing To New Level Of Availability
April 2, 1998 Buckyballs, the soccer-ball-shaped carbon molecules that have been a scientific intrigue since they were first identified in 1985, may just have gotten their first commercial break. ... > full story
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