EULITHA has started making nanostructures with a state-of-the-art e-beam system (Vistec EBPG 5000ES) that was recently installed at the cleanrooms of the Paul Scherrer Institute where EULITHA’s production takes place. The new machine together with a LION LV-1 low voltage machine gives us the ability to manufacture structures with resolution down to 20 nm with quick turnaround times.
Grupo KUO, S.A.B. de C.V. (BMV: KUO), hereinafter Grupo KUO, one of the pioneers in Mexican corporations by establishing a subsidiary in the area of nanotechnology, announces the opening of a plant operated by its subsidiary Macro-M, S.A. de C.V. (Macro-M) in Lerma, State of Mexico, which will consolidate its position in the nanotechnology business.
Hanns-Christoph Naegerl's research group has investigated how ultracold quantum gases behave in lower spatial dimensions. They successfully realized an exotic state, where, due to the laws of quantum mechanics, atoms...
Researchers from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie have, in cooperation with colleagues from Dresden, St. Andrews, La Plata and Oxford, for the first time observed magnetic monopoles and how they emerge in a real material.
An injectable biomaterial gel may help brain tissue grow at the site of a traumatic brain injury, according to findings by a Clemson University bioengineer.
The global economic meltdown slowed year-on-year GaAs industry growth from its previous forecast of 9% down to 6% in 2008. With the market projected to contract again 5% year-on-year in 2009, gains made in 2008 will be e...
At next-generation synchrotron light sources, tiny, powerful x-ray beams - especially of sub-micron size - could substantially advance research in several areas of structural biology, particularly macromolecular crystallography (MX).
TB scientists have shown how some fundamental difficulties, which a more simple set-up had previously hindered, could be avoided. They have written about this in the current edition of the journal "Physical Review Letters". In the next step they want to build such a clock. They already have a practical application in mind: the clock could help to determine geographical heights even more exactly than before.
Recently, metamaterials, by means of which electromagnetic waves, including light, can be manipulated, have fired the researchers’ imagination. These artificial structures possess properties that cannot be found in nature.
Scientists have long known that molecules dance about as the temperature rises, but now researchers know the exact steps that water takes with a certain molecule. Results with small, electrically charged cyanide ions and water molecules reveal that water zips around ions to a greater extent than expected.
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