Category: Nanotechnology Applications

N-fuze — Nanotechnology Food By Max International | Local Small

Max N-Fuze uses a proprietary nanotechnology as a means of nutrient delivery as well as a method to increase the absorption and activation of vitamins,

“Fruit picking,” nanotech style

September 25, 11:00 PM (Mountain Time) Update, Sept 26, 12:25 PM.  One of the advantages of not being able to publish blog posts as I write them is the option of reviewing them before they finally hit the net.  I finally have internet access for the first time since Wednesday evening.  But in re-reading this post before publishing it, I realize that it is a little dry.  So here are the highlights for anyone who can’t be faffed with reading the whole thing: 1.  I’m at a workshop at Ke

Cheap Nanotube Sensors to Detect Toxins in Water

By Mike on September 26th, 2009 A research team at Stanford has developed a new inexpensive sensor chip made with carbon nanotubes, being capable to detect rapid traces of TNT and poison in rivers, reservoirs. This sensor could be used to detect other kinds of toxins and help us track down polluters and it also can be useful to detect terrorist attacks on the water supply or leaching from ammunition making or storage facilities.“We have used semiconducting carbon nanotube network trans

New Findings Could Help Hybrid, Electric Cars Keep Their Cool

Understanding precisely how fluid boils in tiny “microchannels” has led to formulas and models that will help engineers design systems to cool high-power electronics in electric and hybrid cars, aircraft, computers and other devices. Allowing a liquid to boil in cooling systems dramatically increases how much heat can be removed, compared to simply heating a liquid to below its boiling point, said Suresh Garimella, the R. Eugene and Susie E. Goodson Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Purdu

Nanotechnology and Enterprise Architecture

Nanotechnology can shed light on enterprise architecture in terms of integration versus decomposition, "size matters", and imagining the future state. Andy Blumenthal explains.