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IndustryWeek December 1, 2004 |
Technologies Of The Year -- Notable Innovations Technologies with a notable potential to change how materials are manufactured and used... Technologies with a notable potential to improve strategic planning... Technologies with a notable potential to improve operations... etc. |
Chemistry World December 6, 2006 Lionel Milgrom |
Surf's up for Unstable Electron Beams Controlling short high-energy bursts of plasma electrons is difficult. But now physicists in France have managed it, using a laser to inject electrons into the wake of a plasma wave created from a jet of helium gas. |
Chemistry World April 16, 2013 Emma Stoye |
Polymer 'nano-suit' protects insects from vacuum Japanese scientists have shown that coating insect larvae with Tween-20, a common detergent, lets them survive the powerful vacuum inside an electron microscope. The technique could pave the way for high resolution live imaging. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2008 John Teresko |
Bookshelf: American Welding Society Welding Handbook, 9th Edition Volume 3, Welding Processes Welding Handbook, Volume 3, reflects the dramatic changes brought into welding processes over the past decade. |
Chemistry World January 28, 2015 Emma Stoye |
Live insects pictured with electron microscope Takahiko Hariyama's group at Hamamatsu University in Japan had developed a coating that allowed insect larvae to survive in the vacuum chamber of a scanning electron microscope, enabling whole living creatures to be imaged at very high resolution. |
PC Magazine June 25, 2003 John R. Quain |
New Display Tech Revealed Technology innovation is not only supposed to lead to a better mousetrap, it's also supposed to lead to lower costs. That's precisely the idea behind a new display technology that promises inexpensive high-definition monitors. |
Industrial Physicist Eric Lerner |
Briefs Penetrating the fog... Plasma self-organization... Stronger than spider silk... Slow light... etc. |
Technology Research News August 13, 2003 |
Motion sensor nears quantum limit Researchers from the University of California at Santa Barbara have constructed a device that can measure movements as small as one thousandth of a nanometer, which is one hundredth the size of a hydrogen atom. |
Chemistry World October 29, 2009 Simon Hadlington |
Changes in atomic-scale structures observed in real time The method relies on an electron beam being focused to a spot on the sample material only a few tens of nanometres across and pulsed at a rate of femtoseconds. |
Technology Research News August 11, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Chips measure electron spin Practical quantum computers are at least a decade away, and some researchers are betting that they will never be built. But a pair of recent experiments may prove them wrong. |
Inc. April 1, 2010 Lindsay Silberman |
Innovation: A New Kind of Bottle Sterilizer A beam of light that kills germs in beverage bottles. |
Chemistry World March 11, 2009 Phillip Broadwith |
Building nano-scale electronic contacts An international team of researchers has discovered a way of firmly 'welding' carbon nanotubes to metal particles that could lead to new nano-scale electronic contacts. |
Chemistry World April 5, 2012 Simon Hadlington |
Graphene puts wet chemistry under the microscope Scientists in the US and Korea have shown that the single-atom thick carbon membrane can be used as a cover slip for an electron microscope to allow atomic-resolution observations of wet chemistry - something that is notoriously tricky to achieve. |
Chemistry World July 3, 2012 Simon Perks |
Ultrafast transistors created in a vacuum Scientists at the University of Pittsburgh, US, have come up with a new type of transistor that uses a vacuum to conduct electrons a hundred times faster than the conventional solid-state version. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2007 Saswato R. Das |
Power Tool for Making Nanoscale Objects A physics team uses a special electron microscope to carve tiny gold, silver, and aluminum structures a few nanometers across. |
Chemistry World May 26, 2009 Phillip Broadwith |
Salt nanowire surprise Common table salt - normally a brittle crystalline material - can be pulled into nanowires that will extend by more than twice their own length without breaking |
Food Engineering March 6, 2006 Kevin T. Higgins |
Matter's fourth dimension Atmospheric plasma is the term physicists typically use to describe a microwave heating technology developed for metal joining, but it also holds promise for food. |
Food Engineering March 1, 2009 |
Engineering R&D: E-Beam Makes a Comeback Irradiation of raw beef never gained traction in the early 21st Century, but electron beam is staging a comeback in package sterilization. |
Chemistry World July 14, 2006 Victoria Gill |
Ultimate Apex Achieved Researchers have devised a method of coating a tungsten point with a protective layer of nitrogen, which holds all of the metal atoms in place and maintains the tiniest point possible. |
Chemistry World October 16, 2014 Simon Hadlington |
Helium happily shares electrons to create dianions Helium invariably sits with its arms tightly folded and refuses to participate in chemistry, but turns out to be surprisingly generous when it is in the right environment, willing to donate not just one but two electrons to neighboring species. |
Food Engineering January 10, 2006 |
Rotary chamber machine Rotary vacuum chamber machine features all stainless steel construction, patented no-leak sealing system. |
Chemistry World May 25, 2011 James Urquhart |
Electron remains stubbornly spherical UK scientists have made the most accurate measurements to date of the shape of the electron and found - contrary to predictions that it would be aspherical - that it remains round. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2006 John Boyd |
Flat Panels on Display This year's FPD expo, in Yokohama, Japan, boasted triple-view screens, triple-duty pixels, and a squished-down version of the old TV picture tube |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Paul Wallich |
Fusion on a Budget Building your own nuclear fusion reactor is easier than you think |
Chemistry World October 14, 2014 James Urquhart |
Good vibrations for electron microscopy The physical and chemical properties of materials will be better understood thanks to researchers who added vibrational spectroscopy to the electron microscope at a spatial resolution of just a few nanometers. |
CFO June 1, 2006 P.B. Gray |
Inside the Chamber Under Thomas Donohue, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has become a pro-business powerhouse. But not everyone is celebrating. |
Home Theater June 2, 2009 |
LCD Tops Plasma in Large Screen Sizes LCD is selling more in the 40 inches and up categories for the first time. |
Popular Mechanics February 25, 2008 Erik Sofge |
MIT Fights for Clean Power With Holy Grail of Fusion in Reach A look down the belly of extreme machines producing forces 100,000 times stronger than the Earth's and forecasting the future of efficient energy. |
Technology Research News September 10, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Electron teams make bigger qubits Making quantum computers from electronic chips rather than cumbersome laboratory equipment requires control over individual electrons. A scheme that has a string of electrons acting as one could ease the task by expanding the target to a whopping 250 millionths of a millimeter. |
Chemistry World March 7, 2010 Simon Hadlington |
Solvated electron mystery solved Researchers have answered a riddle that has been puzzling scientists for decades: why is it that electrons in an aqueous environment appear to exist in two distinct states |
IndustryWeek January 1, 2005 John Teresko |
Reinventing Heat-Treating Get ready to reconsider process strategies about the heat-treating of metals. A new approach, based on microwave-absorbing plasma, potentially changes all the rules |
Science News June 30, 2001 |
TimeLine: June 27, 1931 Larger mercury vapor electric generating unit being built... Electron waves will reveal struture of crystals... Alpha particle tetrahedrons build up atom nucleus... |