Archive for March, 2013
Posted by Stephanie C on March 29th, 2013
In anticipation of Eric Drexler’s new book, Forbes contributor Bruce Dorminey interviews him about the meaning of nanotechnology and its revolutionary prospects. Selected excerpt: … In what fields would APM cause the most pronounced economic disruption and the collapse of global supply chains to more local chains? The digital revolution had far-reaching effects on information [...]
Posted in Atomically Precise Manufacturing (APM), Bionanotechnology, Computational nanotechnology, Economics, Energy, Future Medicine, Future Warfare, Government programs, Military nanotechnology, Molecular Nanotechnology, Molecular manufacturing, Nano, Nanobiotechnology, Nanomedicine, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Nanotechnology Politics, Productive Nanosystems | No Comments »
Posted by Jim Lewis on March 29th, 2013
By forcing the geometry of the junctions upon which DNA nanotechnology depends, researchers have increased the collection of 2D and 3D structures that they can build to include wire frames and mesh structures.
Posted in Atomically Precise Manufacturing (APM), Bionanotechnology, Molecular Nanotechnology, Molecular manufacturing, Nano, Nanobiotechnology, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Productive Nanosystems, Research | 2 Comments »
Posted by Stephanie C on March 28th, 2013
Researchers from UCLA’s California NanoSystems Institute and Northwestern University have combined multiple imaging techniques to produce high quality 3D images of platinum nanoparticles, allowing advanced visualization of atomic-scale structural defects (an important advancement over X-ray crystallography). The original 2012 work, published in Nature and posted by Jim Lewis here, used electron tomography to study 10-nm [...]
Posted in Nano, Nanoscale Bulk Technologies, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Reports & publications, Research | No Comments »
Posted by Jim Lewis on March 15th, 2013
Nanoparticles decorated to avoid immune system recognition were tested in mice and shown to survive longer and deliver more imaging dye and drug to tumor cells.
Posted in Bionanotechnology, Computational nanotechnology, Future Medicine, Nano, Nanobiotechnology, Nanomedicine, Nanoscale Bulk Technologies, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Research | No Comments »
Posted by Stephanie C on March 6th, 2013
In this Forbes interview, contributor John Nosta introduces us to a teen worth watching: fifteen-year-old Jack Andraka, whose effort to design a nanotube-based sensor for pancreatic cancer detection was initially ignored. The interview taps into some aspects of how innovation occurs and the challenges of bringing new ideas to fruition – aspects which transcend age, [...]
Posted in Bionanotechnology, Future Medicine, NanoEducation, Nanobiotechnology, Nanomedicine, Nanotech | No Comments »
Posted by Jim Lewis on March 1st, 2013
A proposed large project to produce a dynamic map of the functional connectome of the human brain will require a convergence of neuroscience, biotechnology, nanotechnology, and computation, and may therefore spur the development of advanced nanotechnology leading to molecular manufacturing.
Posted in Atomically Precise Manufacturing (APM), Bionanotechnology, Found On Web, Government programs, Machine Intelligence, Media Mentions, Molecular Nanotechnology, Molecular manufacturing, Nano, Nanobiotechnology, Nanoscale Bulk Technologies, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Productive Nanosystems | No Comments »
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