|
Home > News > Tags > Polymer
|
|
30
There are many things that can make the current IT industry better, and the new invention from the University of Leeds might just become one of the ones with a wider and visible impact.
At the moment, laptops, digital cameras, mp3 players, mobile phones and many other portable consumer electronics rely on recharg... |
13 September 2011 03:24 GMT |
 |
Microsoft, which makes the Xbox 360 home gaming console and publishes video games for it, has filled a patent which is linked to a new technology that can add a texture layer to traditional touch screens that are already on the market.The patent, which was apparently filed this week, talks about a “light-induce... |
1 December 2010 03:12 GMT |
 |
Waterproof clothes are very useful but the problem is that after washing them, they tend to lose their superhydrophobic properties, so a team of Chinese researchers finally developed the first waterproof fabric that maintains its properties even after 250 domestic washes at 40ºC.Researchers at the Chinese Academ... |
26 October 2010 10:35 GMT |
 |
Multitouch technology has definitely been one of the main reasons for the buzz behind most Windows 7-enabled products that have emerged over the past few months. The ability to recognize and track multiple touch inputs actually paved the way towards true human-machine interactivity. The latest in the series of advanc... |
2 February 2010 10:36 GMT |
 |
The study of protein structures is a very complex and delicate one, focusing on tiny formations at a very small scale. But this field of research could soon benefit from a large push forward, as researchers recently announced the development of a new laser technology, which allows the use of light pulses to grow High... |
6 August 2009 02:31 GMT |
 |
A team of chemistry specialists from the Warwick University has obtained a novel material that has an extremely high versatility and can be produced on a large scale with existing equipment. Their material is made up of tiny polymer particles covered by silica-based nanoparticle layers, and the end result can be used... |
26 November 2008 16:01 GMT |
 |
A new nanocomposite polymer with remarkable thermal and mechanical properties has been developed by Northwestern University and Princeton University by incorporating functionalized, exfoliated graphite sheets. The material also conducts electricity and may be used to develop thermally stable optically transparent co... |
20 May 2008 08:22 GMT |
 |
The RepRap project managed to give birth to something that you might call a printer only if you think outside the box. The RepRap (Replicating Rapid-prototyper) device is able to replicate and update itself whenever it is necessary. In order to update itself, the unit prints its own parts.According to software develo... |
8 April 2008 09:01 GMT |
 |
A squid is like a mass of gelatinous tissues. Still, its razor-sharp parrot-like beak is one of the toughest natural materials. The beak of a jumbo squid can sever the nerve cord of a large fish, paralyzing it, and they can do this to divers as well. But each time they bite, powerful forces exert pressure on the soft... |
28 March 2008 04:37 GMT |
 |
Only one thing comes to my mind when talking about carbon nanotube electrical properties, conductive transparent polymer plastics, which pretty much have a wide range of applications, especially in the manufacturing process of solar cells. It seems that the conductivity of a carbon nanotube additive can be changed re... |
7 February 2008 07:15 GMT |
 |
Carbon nanotubes have been considered for some time now the perfect building blocks for the future generation of ultrafast computers, but working with such small structures is no easy task, especially while trying to line them up into a specific architecture. This wouldn't be so big a deal, however it disables t... |
23 January 2008 09:33 GMT |
 |
Science fiction materials have turned real. Steel strong plastic has been created by a team at the University of Michigan by imitating the brick-and-mortar molecular structure of the seashells. But unlike steel, the new material is lighter and transparent, even if not stretchy enough. The new plastic is built of lay... |
5 October 2007 04:23 GMT |
 |
People spend annually $10 billion for chewing gum, but this leaves a sticky mess all around us, which is everywhere: from streets to cinema seats. And removing discarded gum is also an industry of millions of dollars. Now, a British company has announced the development of an easy-to-remove chewing gum. The team at t... |
14 September 2007 02:45 GMT |
 |
Imagine a piece of paper that would move and have the shape of a fish. A Harvard team led by biomedical engineer Kit Parker has developed thin sheets of elastic film studded with rat heart muscle cells that can turn this into reality. The muscle-bound sheets react to electricity, as muscles contract, bend and flex th... |
11 September 2007 04:42 GMT |
 |
A surgery can be performed very well, but one of the most dangerous side effects are infections. Only in US, each year 2 million people get infected while in the hospital and over 90,000 die. This number is much higher in developing countries, with less technology and less hygienic conditions. Penicillin could be emp... |
10 September 2007 03:32 GMT |
 |
Miniaturization is the key word to the entire computer hardware manufacturing industry as all the producers are constantly looking for new ways to increase the performance of their products while maintaining the same relative dimensions. As Moore's Law is still true and the number of the components inside a comp... |
7 September 2007 08:59 GMT |
 |
A new discovery in the world of nanotechnology led to the production of a hard wearing and fireproof paint, by replacing the soap used to stabilize latex emulsion paints with nanotech sized clay armor. Latex is used in paint because it solidifies by coalescence of the polymer particles as the water evaporates and th... |
27 July 2007 06:37 GMT |
 |
A new color-changing technology could have many practical applications, from letting you know if your dollar bill is counterfeit simply by stretching it to see if it changes hue, to showing you what food in your fridge is spoiled.Developed by scientists at the University of Southampton in the United Kingdom and the ... |
26 July 2007 11:07 GMT |
 |
Harvesting solar energy is a clever way to make use of a clean and renewable fuel. You don't need to dig the ground for it, there are no pipes and powerplants, and best of all, it's ecological. Unfortunately, existent solar cells are not too efficient and often too expensive.A new development made by resea... |
19 July 2007 09:02 GMT |
 |
Carbon nanotubes, though a relatively recent find, have fueled the imagination of many scientists, who strongly believe that they are the future of electronic circuitry. Polymers are repeating structural units, or monomers, connected by covalent chemical bonds, present in many natural and artificial materials, from ... |
4 July 2007 09:01 GMT |
 |
Organic semiconductors have a good electrical conductivity, ranging between that of ordinary metals and that of insulating chemical compounds, but they have another advantage, given by their organic nature. Polyacetylene is a good example of organic semiconductors.Among future and present applications of these mate... |
28 June 2007 09:06 GMT |
 |
Plastics are made of semisynthetic polymerization products composed of organic condensation or addition polymers and may contain other substances to improve performance or economics. Their widespread use made them indispensable in almost all industry areas.There are methods by which plastics can be broken back down... |
27 June 2007 16:36 GMT |
 |
Plastics are made of semisynthetic polymerization products composed of organic condensation or addition polymers and may contain other substances to improve performance or economics. Their widespread use made them indispensable in almost all industry areas.Unfortunately, plastic polymers are durable and degrade very... |
15 June 2007 06:47 GMT |
 |
Organic light has fascinated mankind for centuries and the quest to replicate nature's engineering abilities has preoccupied many scientists. An organic light-emitting diode (OLED) is any light-emitting diode (LED) whose emissive electroluminescent layer comprises a film of organic compounds. The layer usually ... |
4 June 2007 10:41 GMT |
 |
Plastics are made of semisynthetic polymerization products composed of organic condensation or addition polymers and may contain other substances to improve performance or economics. Their widespread use made them indispensable in almost all industry areas.Scientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst were... |
30 May 2007 09:25 GMT |
 |
Research in the field of artificial fibers have boosted in the last years and aim to create new and improved artificial replacements for natural materials that not only have the same properties, but also present artificial enhancements to benefit the clothing industry and other branches.An international science and ... |
22 May 2007 15:31 GMT |
 |
Everybody knows that wire tapping is an extremely useful tool for police agencies around the world. Getting a witness or an undercover agent to wear a wire on a meeting with a crime boss is something else.It's very risky for the cop and very easy for the bad guys to find a wire stuck to the body with duct tape.... |
22 May 2007 09:55 GMT |
 |
Shish-kebab is a tasty meat dish usually made of lamb and beef, but chicken is not excluded. Only pork. Now, a new type of shish-kebab is on the market, but it's made of polymers. And it's not edible.Shish-kebabs are nanoscale structures that form when polymers crystallize during flow, looking like a skewe... |
21 May 2007 05:51 GMT |
 |
A high flux isotope reactor went online after more than a year of repairs, systems checks and improvements that cost more that $70 million. It's a research reactor at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory internationally recognized as a neutron source for materials studies and isotope pr... |
18 May 2007 15:36 GMT |
 |
Rotavirus is a dangerous pathogen for children, elders and persons with a weak immune system. It induces severe diarrhea and vomiting in children, killing roughly 600-650,000 annually, aged 0-2 years, mainly in developing nations. Rotavirus vaccine is currently delivered in a liquid or freeze-dried form that must be ... |
15 May 2007 17:21 GMT |
 |
Quasicrystals are weird structures, aperiodic structures (aperiodic = lack of translational symmetry, which means that a shifted copy will never match exactly its original) that differ from crystals by lacking the regular repeating structure of crystal structures. The first officially reported case of what came to b... |
15 May 2007 09:47 GMT |
 |
A Swiss team has created a new model of blimp that swims through the air like a fish. The fish-mimicking airship employs artificial muscles fabricated from electroactive polymers (EAPs) to move itself forward. The unique silent non-rigid airship employs its artificial muscles to power through the air like a tuna swim... |
31 March 2007 03:46 GMT |
 |
The problem of the plastic contamination could be solved by biodegradable polymers made of poultry feathers, a solution that would also decrease costs in poultry industry. Only in the US over 29 million tons of non-biodegradable plastic waste reach the landfills yearly. "12 % of all plastic packaging ends up in landf... |
30 March 2007 07:10 GMT |
 |
A novel class of smart sunglasses can change instantly into virtually any color at will just by acting on a minute electronic knob on their frames. "We've developed lenses that aren't like anything else on the market. This could be the fashion statement of the future," said researcher Chunye Xu, a chemical ... |
28 March 2007 03:27 GMT |
 |
What happened to the good old days when a having a notebook implied also having a membership at the local gym because you were forced to carry around something that "weighed a ton", sometimes it could be considered an alternative to bodybuilding. Everything nowadays is lighter, smaller, costs less, has more power, an... |
23 March 2007 12:02 GMT |
 |
Imagine you pass through a surgery and never "see" the surgeon again. That's because he/she does not need to remove the threads.A biopolymer suture approved by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) is made of compounds that our organism naturally produces and are safely absorbed when the wound is healed. These ... |
23 March 2007 10:21 GMT |
 |
An UCLA team has imagined and mass-produced billions of fluorescent microscale polymeric particles in the shapes of all 26 letters of the alphabet in a liquid solution displaying "exquisite fidelity of the shapes". The "LithoParticles" could have important technological and scientific uses. "We can even choose the fo... |
22 March 2007 09:36 GMT |
 |
The continuously advancing technology of portable electronic devices asks for more flexible batteries to power them. A Japanese team at Waseda University have developed a paper-like rechargeable battery. The battery is made of a redox-active organic polymer film roughly 200 nanometers thick and attached nitroxide rad... |
20 March 2007 06:05 GMT |
 |
|
|
|