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Location: Cambridge, United States
Modern manufacturing methods are spectacularly inefficient in their use of
energy and materials, according to a detailed MIT analysis of the energy use of
20 major manufacturing processes.
Overall, new manufacturing systems are...

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Location: Cambridge, United States
MIT Professor of Chemical Engineering Gregory Rutledge keeps a small piece of
fabric that at first glance resembles a Kleenex. This tissue-like material,
softer than silk, is composed of fibers that are a thousand times thinner than a
human...

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Location: Ohio, United States
Researchers have developed a new way to perform chemical reactions involving only about 1,000 molecules. The method could prove useful in the rapid screening of chemical reactions when searching for new drugs and industrial materials.
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Location: Case Western Reserve University, United States
An interdisciplinary team of researchers from the departments
of macromolecular science and engineering and biomedical engineering at the
Case School of...

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Location: University of Illinois, United States
The continuous fabrication of complex, three-dimensional nanoscale structures
and the ability to grow individual nanowires of unlimited length are now
possible with a process developed by researchers at the

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Location: European Institute of Membranes UMR CNRS 5635, France
Researchers at the European
Institute of Membranes (UMR CNRS 5635, Montpellier), led by Mihail Barboiu,
found that the chirality of G-quadruplexes, tubular superstructure of a few
nanometers,...

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Location: DTU - Building 345east, DK-2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark
Researchers are developing an assembly line to build
nanotechnology devices, which will
hopefully greatly increase the efficiency of nanofabrication. The line workers
in the system will likely be tiny...

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Location: Nanobiotechnology Center ,350 Duffield Hall ,Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853 Atten: Randy Hess (rbh27@cornell.edu),PHONE 607-254-5393FAX 607-254-5375, United States
To help light up the nanoworld, a Cornell interdisciplinary team of
researchers has produced microscopic "nanolamps" -- light-emitting c
about the size of a virus or the tiniest of bacteria.In a collaboration of experts in organic...

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Location: 1101 University Avenue,Madison, WI 53706,University of Wisconsin System, United States
At the root of scientific study are observations made with the eyes; yet in
nanoscience, our eyes fail us. The smallest object we can see still looms
thousands of times larger than a typical nano-sized structure. Even the most
powerful...

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