Tag Archives: Small Times Magazine

June 30, 2009: MEMS device demand has held steadier than the overall semiconductor market, but the market for equipment to make MEMS devices has struggled like the overall chip tools sector — but now it’s poised to surge ahead of the broader sector, according to an industry analyst.

The breadth of different MEMS devices — e.g., accelerometers, digital mirror displays, gyroscopes, microfluidic devices, microphones, and pressure sensors — helped keep the sector afloat even as general IC demand fell off a cliff. MEMS device sales actually rose 1.2% in 2008 vs. a -2.8% in the general semiconductor picture, and are seen increasing another 1.7% in 2009 vs. a -21.6% plunge for chips.

For suppliers of equipment to make those devices, though, the story hasn’t been good. MEMS equipment sales sunk -37.5% in 2008 and are projected to drop another -31.2% in 2009, “decreases similar to the -32.5% drop in 2008 and our projected -41.0% drop in 2009 for semiconductor equipment,” notes Robert Castellano of the Information Network, citing a new report, “Global MEMS device, equipment, and materials markets: Forecasts and strategies for vendors and foundries.”

There is good news for MEMS tool suppliers, though. Castellano says this sector actually has already started to rebound in 2Q09, “while we don’t see an uptick in the semiconductor equipment market until mid-Q3.’

June 29, 2009: Carl Zeiss says it will debut before year’s end a new line of high-resolution microscopes combining its HR-SIM (high-resolution structured illumination) and PAL-M (photoactivated localization) technologies, targeting biomedical research.

In a press release, Zeiss explains the benefit of HR-SIM, developed with King’s College in London, is enlarging 3D spatial resolution by projecting a special illumination pattern onto a specimen, which permits multicolored visualization of structures with ~120nm lateral resolution. The PAL-M technique, licensed from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, allows observation of cell structures with ~20nm resolution, an order of magnitude higher than conventional fluorescence techniques.

Ten of the new systems are now being tested at unidentified “internationally renowned” research labs, and “will be presented to the public at the end of the year.” One of those early adopters could be the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, MD (the Zeiss PR quotes two scientists, Catherine and James Galbraith, who appear to have ties there). “The integration of PAL-M and HR-SIM into a single platform has the unique advantage of localizing individual molecules and placing them in the context of images that have twice the resolution of conventional techniques,” stated James Galbraith. Added Catherine: “Being able to visualize and interpret the position of molecules at the nanometer scale is letting us ask questions that we never dreamed asking, let alone answering.”

June 28, 2009 — A team led by Yale University researchers has created the first rudimentary solid-state quantum processor, taking another step toward the ultimate dream of building a quantum computer.

They also used the two-qubit superconducting chip to successfully run elementary algorithms, such as a simple search, demonstrating quantum information processing with a solid-state device for the first time. Their findings were published June 28 in Nature‘s advanced online publication.

“Our processor can perform only a few very simple quantum tasks, which have been demonstrated before with single nuclei, atoms and photons,” said Robert Schoelkopf, the William A. Norton Professor of Applied Physics & Physics at Yale. “But this is the first time they’ve been possible in an all-electronic device that looks and feels much more like a regular microprocessor.”

Working with a group of theoretical physicists led by Steven Girvin, the Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics & Applied Physics, the team manufactured two artificial atoms, or qubits (“quantum bits”). While each qubit is actually made up of a billion aluminum atoms, it acts like a single atom that can occupy two different energy states. These states are akin to the “1” and “0” or “on” and “off” states of regular bits employed by conventional computers. Because of the counterintuitive laws of quantum mechanics, however, scientists can effectively place qubits in a “superposition” of multiple states at the same time, allowing for greater information storage and processing power.

For example, imagine having four phone numbers, including one for a friend, but not knowing which number belonged to that friend. You would typically have to try two to three numbers before you dialed the right one. A quantum processor, on the other hand, can find the right number in only one try.

“Instead of having to place a phone call to one number, then another number, you use quantum mechanics to speed up the process,” Schoelkopf said. “It’s like being able to place one phone call that simultaneously tests all four numbers, but only goes through to the right one.”

These sorts of computations, though simple, have not been possible using solid-state qubits until now in part because scientists could not get the qubits to last long enough. While the first qubits of a decade ago were able to maintain specific quantum states for about a nanosecond, Schoelkopf and his team are now able to maintain theirs for a microsecond—a thousand times longer, which is enough to run the simple algorithms. To perform their operations, the qubits communicate with one another using a “quantum bus”—photons that transmit information through wires connecting the qubits—previously developed by the Yale group.

The key that made the two-qubit processor possible was getting the qubits to switch “on” and “off” abruptly, so that they exchanged information quickly and only when the researchers wanted them to, said Leonardo DiCarlo, a postdoctoral associate in applied physics at Yale’s School of Engineering & Applied Science and lead author of the paper.

Next, the team will work to increase the amount of time the qubits maintain their quantum states so they can run more complex algorithms. They will also work to connect more qubits to the quantum bus. The processing power increases exponentially with each qubit added, Schoelkopf said, so the potential for more advanced quantum computing is enormous. But he cautions it will still be some time before quantum computers are being used to solve complex problems.

“We’re still far away from building a practical quantum computer, but this is a major step forward.”

June 26, 2009: Researchers at Brown U. say they have devised a way to eliminate bacteria that invade human tissue though medical devices: send magnetic nanoparticle “headhunters” after them.

Their findings, published in the International Journal of Nanomedicine, address the problem of Staphylococcus epidermidis, a bacteria commonly found on human skin and generally innocuous — unless it gets inside the body; it’s one of the leading causes of infections in hospitals. Among the various ways s. epidermis gets into the body is by “hitching a ride” on medical device implants, e.g. catheters, prostheses, etc. Once inside, the bacteria multiply on the device’s surface and generate a slimy film that wards off antibiotics — up to 2.5% of hip and knee implants in the US thus become infected.

To do battle, Brown researchers Thomas Webster and Erik Taylor focused on superparamagnetic iron-oxide nanoparticles (8nm-high, and chosen for magnetic maneuverability and trackability) to zero in on the implant. Once there the nanoparticles penetrate the bacterial shield (they speculate that a strong enough magnetic field forces them through); once inside the defenses the particles penetrate the bacterial cells and kill them in an as-yet unknown process. (Iron was known to kill s. epidermis, but Webster speculates it may be due to iron overload in the bacteria cell.) After 48hrs, 10μg of the agents were seen to eliminate up to 28% of the bacteria; in three treatments over six days, essentially all of them were destroyed, indicating “a continual killing of the bacteria until the film is gone,” noted Webster.

Next steps are to see how the iron-oxide nanoparticles fare against other bacteria, and then eventually move the research into trials with implants in animals. And they also want to better understand something else they saw as a result of the nanoparticle infusion — promotion of natural bone cell growth on the implant’s surface.

The research was funded by the private Hermann Foundation and in part by the National Science Foundation.


Iron-oxide nanoparticles developed at Brown University target an infected prosthesis, penetrate a bacterial film on the implant’s surface and thwart the colony by killing the bacteria. The nanoparticles also are believed to help natural bone cell growth. (Credit: Erik Taylor/Brown University)

June 26, 2009: Researchers in South Carolina are raising red flags about the potential impact of nanoparticles, by tracking how easily they can distribute through a marine ecosystem and up the food chain.

The paper, published this week by the journal Nature Nanotechnology, highlights work from scientists at the University of South Carolina’s Nanocenter and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Coastal Center for Environmental Health and Biomolecular Research (CCEHBR), who note that nanoparticles can move easily into the marine ecosystem, absorbed and transferred from marsh grasses to biofilms and into filter-feeding species such as clams.

The group introduced gold nanorods (selected for their traceability) into three lab replications of a coastal estuarine ecosystem, complete with a tidal marsh creek and sea water, sea grass in sediment, microbes, biofilms, snails, clams, shrimp, and fish. From the paper abstract:

A single dose of gold nanorods (65nm length × 15nm diameter) was added to each mesocosm and their distribution in the aqueous and sediment phases monitored over 12 days. Nanorods partitioned between biofilms, sediments, plants, animals and sea water with a recovery of 84.4%. Clams and biofilms accumulated the most nanoparticles on a per mass basis, suggesting that gold nanorods can readily pass from the water column to the marine food web.

The study’s main take-away appears to be that more work is needed to more specifically determine how nanoparticles are transported and distributed through a marine environment. “We did not look at what happens ‘up the food chain,” noted CCEHBR director Geoff Scott, in a statement discussing the study and its results. But this preliminary work suggests a clear need to understand the impact on nanoparticles on shellfish and fish which humans eat. One interesting observation along these lines: the clams “accumulated a significant amount of the nanomaterial,” Scott noted.

June 26, 2009: KLD Energy Technologies is launching US sales of an electric scooter based on an transmissionless motor system that uses a nanocomposite material to boost energy efficiency.

The firm’s “Neue” motor, which it says can reach speeds of up to 65mph (Twice that of other electric motors) and a range of 100mi on a standard lithium battery, is built on a nanocrystalline composite material that the company says conducts energy up to 10× more efficiently than iron-core motors (2500Hz vs. 250Hz), with no need for additional cooling systems.

With a high frequency and low RP the motor does not require a transmission, and enables the scooter to achieve speeds and performance levels comparable to gas-powered vehicles, the firm says.

Base price for the scooter is $3288, plus a $500 reservation; deliveries are slated to start in 3Q10.

June 25, 2009: Raytheon Co. says it has been awarded a four-year, $6M contract (including all options) by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop nano thermal interface materials (nTIM) to improve thermal performance of defense electronics systems.

The program will use engineered nanomaterials to reduce thermal resistance between interface layers in electronic assemblies; the resulting performance improvements will translate into smaller, lighter, less costly and more powerful defense systems.

Raytheon’s Integrated Defense Systems (IDS) unit will head up the nTIS development, partnering with experts assembled from Purdue and Georgia Tech. Work will be done at the firm’s Integrated Air Defense Center and Surveillance and Sensors Center, both in Massachusetts.

June 25, 2009: Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe has released $1.5M from the state’s General Improvement Fund to the U. of Arkansas for construction of a new Nanotechnology Center.

“Governor Beebe has long been one of the strongest supporters of our nanotechnology research, and this is very concrete evidence of that support,” said Chancellor G. David Gearhart, in a statement from the school. “The governor has the vision to see this as an investment in our state’s economy, an investment that will pay dividends in the form of new jobs and new businesses. His support is crucial to our success, and we are very grateful to him.”

Preliminary work is now being done to build a utility tunnel to the future site of the nanotech center on W. Dickson St.; construction is expected to begin around the end of July.

June 24, 2009: Researchers from Denmark and China are now collaborating in several nanotech fields, including chemically manufactured electronic components and molecules that convert heat to electricity, reports the European Union’s Community Research and Development Information Service (CORDIS).

Work at the new Center for Molecular Nano-electronics, joining efforts from the University of Copenhagen’s Nano-Science Center and Niels Bohr Institute and Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Sciences, broadly addresses molecular nanoelectronics. CORDIS notes two “opportunities for development” in particular: “the development of chemically manufactured computer electronics,” eyeing future application in computing, and “molecules with the capacity to convert heat to electric currents,” eventually creating heat emitters used in cars or factories.

The two sides also are establishing a “common study program,” which would include an exchange program for students and researchers, building on a prior partnership; two Danish nanotech students previously studied in China for two months in 2007.

“The new centre is an ideal framework to exchange researchers and equally importantly, research students, creating the best possible foundation for a fruitful research partnership,” explained Thomas Bjørnholm, a professor at the University of Copenhagen, in a statement.

June 24, 2009: Researchers from Denmark and China are now collaborating in several nanotech fields, including chemically manufactured electronic components and molecules that convert heat to electricity, reports the European Union’s Community Research and Development Information Service (CORDIS).

Work at the new Center for Molecular Nano-electronics, joining efforts from the University of Copenhagen’s Nano-Science Center and Niels Bohr Institute and Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Sciences, broadly addresses molecular nanoelectronics. CORDIS notes two “opportunities for development” in particular: “the development of chemically manufactured computer electronics,” eyeing future application in computing, and “molecules with the capacity to convert heat to electric currents,” eventually creating heat emitters used in cars or factories.

The two sides also are establishing a “common study program,” which would include an exchange program for students and researchers, building on a prior partnership; two Danish nanotech students previously studied in China for two months in 2007.

“The new centre is an ideal framework to exchange researchers and equally importantly, research students, creating the best possible foundation for a fruitful research partnership,” explained Thomas Bjørnholm, a professor at the University of Copenhagen, in a statement.