X-Message-Number: 26254
From: "Gina Miller" <>
References: <>
Subject: The Nanogirl News~
Date: Fri, 27 May 2005 13:38:30 -0700

The Nanogirl News
May 27, 2005


A V6 Engine for the Nano-Age. The world of the very small is about to receive a 
very powerful engine. Berkeley Lab scientists have created the world's smallest 
electric motor that may someday power nanoscale devices that walk, crawl, swim, 
and fly. Although it is too early too determine what the motor will propel - 
perhaps probes that deliver disease-fighting drugs inside the body or winging 
nanobots that sniff out explosives - it packs a big kick in its tiny frame. The 
motor measures only 200 nanometers long (a nanometer is one-billionth of a 
meter), but its power density is 100 million times greater than that of a 
225-horsepower V6 engine. It draws its enormous power from surface tension, the 
same cohesive force between liquid molecules that allows bubbles to form and 
insects to walk on water. (Berkeley Lab 5/13/05)
http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/sabl/2005/May/05-nanoengine.html


Tiny Bundles Seek And Destroy Breast Cancer Cells. A Penn State College of 
Medicine study shows for the first time in an animal model that ceramide, a 
naturally occurring substance that prevents the growth of cells, can be 
administered through the blood stream to target and kill cancer cells. "Ceramide
is the substance that accumulates in cancer tissues and helps to kill cancer 
cells when patients undergo chemotherapy and radiation," said Mark Kester, 
professor of pharmacology, Penn State College of Medicine, Penn State Milton S. 
Hershey Medical Center. "By boosting the amount of ceramide through an injection
in the bloodstream, our study in mice suggests that we can provide a stronger 
cancer-killing therapy without additional side effects." This study, titled 
"Systemic Delivery of Liposomal Short-Chain Ceramide Limits Solid Tumor Growth 
in Murine Models of Breast Adenocarcinoma," was published in the May issue of 
Clinical Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer 
Research. (Penn State 5/24/05) http://live.psu.edu/story/12180


NASA Goes Nano for Air Purification. "For human space flight missions, NASA must
continually monitor air quality and toxicity levels to ensure the health and 
safety of the crew," said Spacehab Chief Operating Officer Michael Bain. But, he
added, "developing, transporting and installing large, complex detection and 
classification equipment in orbit is extremely problematic."...The NASA/Spacehab
project aims to further reduce the size down to that of a stack of playing 
cards. To create a device that small, Spacehab has enlisted the help of Zyvex, a
company that specializes in nanotechnology. (NASA 5/25/05) 


http://www.newsfactor.com/news/NASA-Goes-Nano-for-Air-Purification/story.xhtml?story_id=12100002KFS3


Nanotech Finds Tumors Before Visible on MRI. Biomedical engineers have used 
nanotechnology to find human melanoma tumors in mice while the growths are still
invisible to conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Earlier detection 
can potentially increase the effectiveness of treatment. This is especially true
with melanoma, which begins as a highly curable disorder, then progresses into 
an aggressive and deadly disease. A second benefit of the approach is that the 
same nanoparticles used to find the tumors could potentially deliver stronger 
doses of anti-cancer drugs directly to the tumor site with fewer side effects. 
(ScienceBlog 5/19/05)
http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/node/7940


New opportunities from old chemistry in surface science, say Purdue chemists. 
Gold surfaces are often used as baseplates of sensors and in nanomaterials, and 
scientists have been searching for stable organic coatings they can attach to 
gold to form an interface between the organic and inorganic worlds. Findings 
suggest that amines may be the best candidate group of such materials. (Purdue U
5/26/05) http://news.uns.purdue.edu/UNS/html4ever/2005/050526.Wei.sensor.html


ORNL nanoscience center 'Jump Starts' medical compound device. A device that 
could create custom-tailored medical compounds faster than ever before is one of
the first projects launched under the new Center for Nanophase Materials 
Science at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Project director Joseph Matteo, 
founder and CEO of the local research firm NanoTek, is building a small, 
microfluidic machine to quickly and reliably synthesize drugs, medicines, 
diagnostic imaging agents and other compounds. (ORNL 5/24/05)


http://www.ornl.gov/info/press_releases/get_press_release.cfm?ReleaseNumber=mr20050524-00


Nanotechnology Makes Packaging Intelligent, Smart and Safe. According to a new 
market study developed by Helmut Kaiser Consultancy nanotechnology has been 
significantly increasing its impact on the food and beverage packaging industry 
during last three years. The sales of the nano-related packaging products have 
been rising from US$ 150 million in 2002 to $ 860 million in 2004 worldwide. 
Nonetheless, compared with the over $100 billion food and beverage packaging 
industry, the growth potential of the nanopackaging is still enormous. It is 
predicted that nanotechnology will change 25% of the food packaging business in 
the next decade, that means a yearly over $ 30 billion market. (nanotechwire.com
5/26/05) http://nanotechwire.com/news.asp?nid=1961


Rice unveils 'green' microcapsule production method. Chemical engineers from 
Rice University have developed a fundamentally new approach - the most 
environmentally sensitive yet devised - for making tiny hollow spheres called 
microcapsules. Microcapsule research is one of the most active fields in applied
nanotechnology, with dozens of companies either developing or using the tiny 
containers - usually smaller than living cells - to deliver everything from 
drugs and imaging agents to perfumes and flavor enhancers. In research appearing
on the cover of this month's issue (Vol. 17, Issue. 9) of the journal Advanced 
Materials, Michael Wong and his research group describe an approach for making 
microcapsules that involves mixing a solution of polymer and salt with tiny 
particles of silica that contain just a few hundred atoms apiece. (EurekAlert 
5/26/05)
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-05/ru-ru052605.php


Nanotechnology Can Play Vital Role in Forest Products Industries. The future of 
the U.S. forest products industries, which employ some 1.1 million Americans and
contribute more than $240 billion annually to the nation's economy, could 
depend on how well those industries embrace the emerging science of 
nanotechnology, according to a report just released by a panel of leading 
researchers from industry, government labs, and academic institutions. The 
hundred-page report, titled "Nanotechnology for the Forest Products Industry: 
Vision and Technology Roadmap," can be read or downloaded for free from: 
http://www.nanotechforest.org. It will also be available on other websites 
including those of the USDA Forest Service's Forest Products Laboratory (FPL) 
(http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us) and the Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper 
Industry (TAPPI) ( http://www.tappi.org/content/pdf/nanotechnology_roadmap.pdf 
). TAPPI also plans to publish a hard-copy version. (Nanotechwire 4/5/05) 
http://nanotechwire.com/news.asp?nid=1795


Little Answers To World's Biggest Problems: Top 10 Nanotech Applications To Aid 
Poor. In a new study by researchers at the University of Toronto Joint Centre 
for Bioethics (JCB), published in PLoS Medicine, the open access global health 
journal, an international panel of 63 experts were asked to rank the 
nanotechnology applications they think are most likely to benefit developing 
countries in the areas of water, agriculture, nutrition, health, energy and the 
environment in the next 10 years. The study is the first ever ranking of 
nanotechnology applications relative to their impact on development. See the 
list by clicking this news story. (ScienceDaily 5/3/05) 
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/05/050503103638.htm


>From attograms to Daltons: Cornell NEMS device detects the mass of a single DNA
molecule. Some people are never satisfied. First, nanotechnology researchers at
Cornell University built a device so sensitive it could detect the mass of a 
single bacterium--about 665 femtograms. Then they built one that could sense the
presence of a single virus -- about 1.5 femtograms. Now, with a refined 
technique, they have detected a single DNA molecule, weighing in at 995,000 
Daltons -- a shade more than 1 attogram -- and can even count the number of DNA 
molecules attached to a single receptor by noting the difference in mass. The 
devices, which fall in the class of nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS), could 
be made even more sensitive through increased miniaturization, the researchers 
say. The technology, they suggest, can be combined with microfluidics to perform
genetic analysis of very small samples of DNA, even the amount present in a 
single cell. 
(Cornell 5/18/05) http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/May05/DNAcount.ws.html


Nanotechnology comes to the lead-free rescue. Like it or not, lead-free 
requirements and RoHS compliance are impending realities. While many companies 
have processes and products that meet these requirements right now, there are 
many reasons to be concerned about the use of lead-free solders. Conductive 
adhesives with nano-engineered fillers have shown some promise toward addressing
those concerns. Much of this work is being done in the US by Professor C.P. 
Wong's group at the Georgia Institute of Technology. (Ferret 5/19/05) 
http://www.ferret.com.au/articles/da/0c02feda.asp


US worried about losing nanotechnology dominance. Although the US remains the 
world leader in nanotechnology research and development (R&D), a new White House
report warns that US nanotech dominance is under threat as other countries 
improve their own programmes. The report, released by the President's Council of
Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) on 18 May, says that the US, through
its National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI), must do more to address societal 
concerns and the potential risks - both environmental and health - of this 
developing technology. (Cordis 5/20/05) 


http://dbs.cordis.lu/cgi-bin/srchidadb?CALLER=NHP_EN_NEWS&ACTION=D&SESSION=&RCN=EN_RCN_ID:23852


Like The Famous Doughboy, Nanotubes Give When You Poke 'Em. In a recent study, 
researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology, along with colleagues from 
the IBM Watson Research Center and the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne 
in Switzerland, found that while nanotubes are extremely stiff when pulled from 
the ends, they give when poked in the middle. The larger the radius, the softer 
they become. The finding, which is important for the development of 
nanoelectronics, is published in the May 6, 2005 edition of the journal Physical
Review Letters. (Georgia IT 5/17/05) 
http://www.gatech.edu/news-room/release.php?id=565


Nanotube water doesn't freeze - even at hundreds of degrees below zero. A new 
form of water has been discovered by physicists in Argonne's Intense Pulsed 
Neutron Source (IPNS) Division. Called nanotube water, these molecules contain 
two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom but do not turn into ice - even at 
temperatures near absolute zero. Instead, inside a single wall tube of carbon 
atoms less than 2 nanometers, or 2 billionths of a meter wide, the water forms 
an icy, inner wall of water molecules with a chain of liquid-like water 
molecules flowing through the center. This occurs at 8 Kelvins, which is minus 
445 Fahrenheit. As the temperature rises closer to room temperature, the 
nanotube water gradually becomes liquid. (Argonne 5/13/05) 
http://www.anl.gov/Media_Center/News/2005/IPNS050513.html


Buckyballs batter bacteria. For the first time, researchers have shown that 
aggregates of C60-better known as fullerenes or buckyballs-can form nanosized, 
crystalline structures that inhibit the growth and respiration of certain 
bacteria. In a paper recently posted to ES&T's Research ASAP website 
(eso48099n), researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Rice 
University have also found that these nanocrystals may be more mobile in water 
than expected. Both results strengthen the argument that nanoparticles have 
different properties than their bulk counterparts, but those differences are not
reflected in current procedures for safe handling. (Environmental Science & 
Tech 5/4/05) 
http://pubs.acs.org/subscribe/journals/esthag-w/2005/may/science/rp_nanocrystals.html


(Book Review) Eco-friendly and Nano Smart, in Theory. Louis Theodore, a chemical
engineering professor at Manhattan College, and Robert G. Kunz, an 
environmental consultant and former environmental engineering manager at Air 
Products and Chemicals, argue that nanotechnology will reshape industry in the 
near future. They offer the textbook "Nanotechnology: Environmental 
Impli-cations and Solutions" as a way to introduce nanotechnology to the next 
generation of environmental managers as well as to instill some environmental 
awareness into nanotechnology professionals. "One of the key features of this 
book is that it could serve both academia (students) and industry," they write 
in the preface. "Thus, this book offers material not only to individuals with 
limited technical background but also to those with extensive industrial 
experience. As such, it can be used as a text . and as a training tool for 
industry." 

(Smalltimes 5/25/05) 
http://www.smalltimes.com/document_display.cfm?section_id=76&document_id=9139


Nanotech Meets Medicine. Nanotechnology is a developing field that is showing 
promise in a number of areas. One such area discussed at the 11th annual Food & 
Drug Administration Science Forum last month is medicine. The size of 
nanoparticles is on the same order of magnitude as biological materials; thus, 
nanotechnology can aid in improving the efficiency and effectiveness of things 
like drug delivery and bioimplants. 
(C&E 5/16/05) http://pubs.acs.org/cen/nanofocus/top/83/8320medicine.html

Have a nice weekend.

Gina "Nanogirl" Miller
Nanotechnology Industries
http://www.nanoindustries.com
Personal: http://www.nanogirl.com/index2.html
Foresight Senior Associate http://www.foresight.org
Nanotechnology Advisor Extropy Institute  http://www.extropy.org
3D/Animation http://www.nanogirl.com/museumfuture/index.htm
Microscope Jewelry
http://www.nanogirl.com/crafts/microjewelry.htm
Email: 
"Nanotechnology: Solutions for the future."


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