Nanotechnology Now – Press Release: Solving a superconducting mystery with more precise computations: New method from Clemson University researcher, enabled by Frontera supercomputer, helps explain role of phonons in copper-based superconductivity

Home > Press > Solving a superconducting mystery with more precise computations: New method from Clemson University researcher, enabled by Frontera supercomputer, helps explain role of phonons in copper-based superconductivity A conceptual representation of the role of phonons in cuprate superconductivity. CREDIT Yao Wang, Clemson University Abstract:Researchers have known...

Nanotechnology Now – Press Release: Acceleration of cancer biomarker detection for point of care diagnostics

Home > Press > Acceleration of cancer biomarker detection for point of care diagnostics Computer rendering of the magnetic activate capture+digital counting approach for accelerated digital biodetection CREDIT Alex David Jerez Roman, Beckman Institute imaging technology group Abstract:The detection and quantification of cancer-associated molecular biomarkers in body fluids, or...

Nano-architected material refracts light backward

Jan 28, 2022 (Nanowerk News) A newly created nano-architected material exhibits a property that previously was just theoretically possible: it can refract light backward, regardless of the angle at which the light strikes the material. This property is known as negative refraction and it means that the refractive index—the speed...

Nanotechnology Now – Press Release: Studied for clean energy, carbon nanotubes find new potential in anticancer drug delivery: Short carbon nanotubes in liposome membranes help fuse the liposomes and cancer cells to directly deliver a cancer-killing drug

Home > Press > Studied for clean energy, carbon nanotubes find new potential in anticancer drug delivery: Short carbon nanotubes in liposome membranes help fuse the liposomes and cancer cells to directly deliver a cancer-killing drug Liposomes studded with carbon nanotubes and carrying a chemotherapy drug dock to the surface...

Scientists weave atomically thin wires into ribbons

Jan 29, 2022 (Nanowerk News) Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have succeeded in using nanowires of a transition-metal chalcogenide to make atomically thin nanoribbons. Bundles of nanowires were exposed to a gas of chalcogen atoms and heat which helped merge the threads into narrow strips (ACS Applied Nano Materials, "Nanowire-to-Nanoribbon...

Physicists manipulate magnetism with light

Jan 28, 2022 (Nanowerk News) With the help of a “playground” they created for observing exotic physics, MIT scientists and colleagues have not only found a new way to manipulate magnetism in a material with light but have also realized a rare form of matter. The former could lead to...

Artificial muscles made of proteins

Jan 28, 2022 (Nanowerk News) Dr. Stefan Schiller and Dr. Matthias Huber from the University of Freiburg’s livMatS Cluster of Excellence have succeeded in developing a muscle solely on the basis of natural proteins. The autonomous contractions of the material, which the researchers presented in the journal Advanced Intelligent Systems...

Exotic cocktail in the atmosphere of extreme exoplanet

Jan 28, 2022 (Nanowerk News) Using high-resolution spectroscopy, researchers at Lund University in Sweden have succeeded in mapping the atmosphere of an exoplanet located 322 light years from Earth. The knowledge gained about the hot gas surrounding the Jupiter-like planet is important for the understanding of Earth-like planets. WASP-189b is...