Nanite News
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Links | 
New Articles
The gold standard: Researchers use nanoparticles to make 3-D DNA nanotubes 1/2/2009

Gold nanoparticles for controlled drug delivery 12/31/2008

Enhancing solar cells with nanoparticles 12/25/2008

Researchers make breakthrough in the production of double-walled carbon nanotubes 12/24/2008

Study on cytotoxicity of carbon nanotubes 12/23/2008

New research to exploit world's thinnest material 12/19/2008

Researchers create non-toxic clean-up method for potentially toxic nano materials 12/18/2008

Researchers print dense lattice of transparent nanotube transistors on flexible base 12/17/2008

Nanotubes sniff out cancer agents in living cells 12/16/2008

Nature, nanotechnology fuse in electric yarn that detects blood 12/16/2008

Method sorts out double-walled carbon nanotube problem 12/15/2008

Panel blasts federal nanotech risk research strategy 12/14/2008

People in the US and the UK show strong similarities in their attitudes toward nanotechnologies 12/13/2008

Nanotechnology 'culture war' possible, says study 12/12/2008

For nano, religion in US dictates a wary view 12/11/2008

When a good nanoparticle goes bad (11/11/2008)

Tags:
nanoparticles, gold

Researchers at Cornell University recently made a major breakthrough when they invented a method to test and demonstrate a long-held hypothesis that some very, very small metal particles work much better than others in various chemical processes such as converting chemical energy to electricity in fuel cells or reducing automobile pollution.

The breakthrough, reported in this week's edition of the journal Nature Materials, also came with a surprise. By devising a way to watch individual molecules react with a single nanoscale particle of gold in real time, researchers confirmed that some gold particles are better at increasing the rate of a chemical reaction than others, but they also found that a good catalyst sometimes spontaneously turns bad.

Understanding why these particles change and how to stabilize the "good" particles may lead to solutions for a wide range of problems such as the current global energy challenge.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the National Science Foundation

Credit Card Consolidation - Internet Marketing - Loans - Credit Cards

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2010 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.