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April 29, 2009: Scientists at Florida State University (FSU) will finally be able to clearly see what misoriented atoms are up to along the defects of the new materials that they are developing and how they relate to neighbors, when the school takes delivery of a new JEOL atomic resolution Scanning Transmission Electron Microscope (S/TEM) later this year.

FSU’s Applied Superconductivity Center, housed in the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory; the High Performance Materials Institute in Tallahassee, FL; scientists at FSU; and even more broadly throughout Florida, will soon have access to the highest resolution (80 picometers) of any commercially available S/TEM in its class, according to a news release.

The imaging and analytical resolution of the new JEOL 200kV S/TEM will make it possible to directly observe atomic position, chemical composition, and electronic bonding information that is crucial to development of novel materials with the highest performance. Typical materials are superconductors, lightweight high performance composites, semiconductors, biomaterials, catalyses, materials for fuel cells and high strength metallic materials.

“It’s great that multiple fine institutes and centers exist on this campus and can agree to collectively invest on behalf of a large number of people,” said Dr. David Larbalestier, one of the world’s foremost materials scientists and director of Florida State University’s Applied Superconductivity Center.

FSU’s National High Field Magnet Lab (NHFML) researches the properties of powerful new superconducting materials, such as YBCO, BSCCO, and the recently discovered pnictides. The NHFML is home to hybrid and high field magnets including one with the world’s highest magnetic field (45 tesla, nearly a million times that of the earth in its orbit). The High-Performance Materials Institute (HPMI) will utilize the TEM in its efforts toward developing multifunctional nanocomposites.

“This new JEOL STEM in full analytical mode will let us perform analysis at the single atom level that we dreamed of then, but which has been out of our grasp until now,” said Larbalestier. “The new machine is ideal for settling this type of problem. We should soon provide the capabilities to produce multifunctional materials that will make transportation more energy efficient, affordable, and safer.”

April 29, 2009: Liquidia Technologies presented data at the National Foundation of Infectious Disease (NFID) Annual Meeting that supports new insight into a technology that could provide more safe and effective vaccines for a wide variety of diseases, according to a company news release.

Results of the study show that the desired immune response elicited by a vaccine can be enhanced up to 10-fold when the vaccine protein is linked to nanoparticles of a particular size and shape. The discovery may lead to a new generation of vaccines that could provide faster immunity to disease and potentially minimize the need for multiple vaccinations or “booster shots.”

“It has long been known that virus and bacteria come in a variety of sizes and shapes and that the human body responds very differently to each one of these disease causing agents,” said Joseph DeSimone, founder of Liquidia Technologies and Chancellor’s Eminent Professor of Chemistry at University of North Carolina — Chapel Hill. “This data may help us better understand how to use the characteristics of naturally occurring pathogens to create vaccines that are more effective and require less product exposure for the patient.”

Current vaccination methods utilize weakened or deactivated pathogens (disease causing agents) to elicit an immune response in the body without the symptoms of the actual infection. Subsequently, if a person is exposed to others with that particular disease their immune system can quickly respond and more effectively fight off the infection. This study suggests that an even greater immune response may be generated when the same weakened pathogens are attached to extraordinarily small particles that are well tolerated by the body.

“The immune system is very sensitive to the size and shape of foreign bodies introduced into the body,” said Neal Fowler, CEO of Liquidia Technologies. “Having insight into the role of these characteristics when mounting an immune response is a very significant step toward finding safer and more effective ways of administering vaccines to patients.”

The particles used in this study were created using a proprietary method, “particle replication in non-wetting templates” (PRINT). The PRINT Platform leverages the precision of micro-electronics to create rationally designed nanoparticles with absolute control over particle size, shape, composition and surface chemistry in a controlled and scalable manufacturing process.

In developing particle technologies for vaccines, each of these variables can be optimized for a specific immunogenic response allowing for an unprecedented level of design control compared to other delivery systems. In addition to controlled co-delivery of antigens or other pharmacological agents that can increase or aid their effect, the PRINT platform allows the exploration of the impact of non-spherical particle shapes on biological response.

April 29, 2009: Researchers at the University of Illinois have developed a membrane-penetrating nanoneedle for the targeted delivery of one or more molecules into the cytoplasm or the nucleus of living cells. In addition to ferrying tiny amounts of cargo, the nanoneedle can also be used as an electrochemical probe and as an optical biosensor.

“Nanoneedle-based delivery is a powerful new tool for studying biological processes and biophysical properties at the molecular level inside living cells,” said Min-Feng Yu, a professor of mechanical science and engineering and corresponding author of a paper accepted for publication in Nano Letters, and posted on the journal’s Web site.

In the paper, Yu and collaborators describe how they deliver, detect and track individual fluorescent quantum dots in a cell’s cytoplasm and nucleus. The quantum dots can be used for studying molecular mechanics and physical properties inside cells.

To create a nanoneedle, the researchers begin with a rigid but resilient boron-nitride nanotube. The nanotube is then attached to one end of a glass pipette for easy handling, and coated with a thin layer of gold. Molecular cargo is then attached to the gold surface via “linker” molecules. When placed in a cell’s cytoplasm or nucleus, the bonds with the linker molecules break, freeing the cargo.

With a diameter of approximately 50nm, the nanoneedle introduces minimal intrusiveness in penetrating cell membranes and accessing the interiors of live cells.

The delivery process can be precisely controlled, monitored and recorded — goals that have not been achieved in prior studies.

“The nanoneedle provides a mechanism by which we can quantitatively examine biological processes occurring within a cell’s nucleus or cytoplasm,” said Yang Xiang, a professor of molecular and integrative physiology and a co-author of the paper. “By studying how individual proteins and molecules of DNA or RNA mobilize, we can better understand how the system functions as a whole.”

The ability to deliver a small number of molecules or nanoparticles into living cells with spatial and temporal precision may make feasible numerous new strategies for biological studies at the single-molecule level, which would otherwise be technically challenging or even impossible, the researchers report.

“Combined with molecular targeting strategies using quantum dots and magnetic nanoparticles as molecular probes, the nanoneedle delivery method can potentially enable the simultaneous observation and manipulation of individual molecules,” said Ning Wang, a professor of mechanical science and engineering and a co-author of the paper.

Beyond delivery, the nanoneedle-based approach can also be extended in many ways for single-cell studies, said Yu, who also is a researcher at the Center for Nanoscale Chemical-Electrical-Mechanical Manufacturing Systems. “Nanoneedles can be used as electrochemical probes and as optical biosensors to study cellular environments, stimulate certain types of biological sequences, and examine the effect of nanoparticles on cellular physiology.”

April 28, 2009: A former official with the US Environmental Protection Agency is calling for a new environmental and consumer protection agency to oversee nanotechnology.

Existing existing health and safety agencies are unable to cope with the risk assessment, standard setting and oversight challenges of advancing nanotechnology, according to J. Clarence (Terry) Davies. In a recently released paper, Oversight of Next Generation Nanotechnology, he calls for a new Department of Environmental and Consumer Protection to oversee product regulation, pollution control and monitoring and technology assessment.

“Federal regulatory agencies already suffer from under-funding and bureaucratic ossification, but they will require more than just increased budgets and minor rule changes to deal adequately with the potential adverse effects of new technologies,” according to Davies. “New thinking, new laws and new organizational forms are necessary. Many of these changes will take a decade or more to accomplish, but there is an urgent need given the rapid pace of technological change to start thinking about them now.”

In the report’s preface, first EPA administrator William D. Ruckelshaus points out that the proposed new agency “…would be more of a science agency than the current regulatory ones and would incorporate more integrated approaches to oversight and monitoring.”

The proposed agency would foster more integrated oversight and a unified mechanism for product regulation to deal with current problems like toxics in children’s toys and newer challenges like nanotechnology. A more integrated approach to pollution control was necessary even before EPA was created, and since that time the need has only increased, according to Davies.

Davies served during the George H.W. Bush administration as Assistant Administrator for Policy, Planning and Evaluation at the US Environmental Protection Agency. In 1970, as a consultant to the President’s Advisory Council on Executive Organization, he co-authored the plan that created EPA. As a senior staff member at the Council on Environmental Quality, he wrote the original version of what became the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).

April 27, 2009: President Barack Obama has named Chad Mirkin, a pioneer in dip-pen nanolithography and founder of Illinois-based NanoInk, to his Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.

Mirkin is professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Chemistry, and Medicine at Northwestern University, as well as director of Northwestern’s International Institute of Nanotechnology. He is a leading expert on nanotechnology, including nanoscale manufacturing and applications to medicine; he was awarded the Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology in 2002.

PCAST is an advisory group of the nation’s leading scientists and engineers who will advise the president and vice president and formulate policy in the many areas where understanding of science, technology, and innovation is key to strengthening the economy.

“This council represents leaders from many scientific disciplines who will bring a diversity of experience and views,” Obama said. “I will charge PCAST with advising me about national strategies to nurture and sustain a culture of scientific innovation.”

April 27, 2009: Analog Devices Inc. (NYSE: ADI) and Infineon Technologies AG will collaborate on next-generation automotive airbag systems, the companies announced in a news release.

ADI is a developer of motion-sensing MEMS inertial accelerometers and gyroscopes for automotive safety systems. Infineon provides nearly all automotive application-specific components for an airbag system, such as microcontrollers, satellite sensor communication interface ICs, airbag deployment ICs, power supply components, CAN and LIN transceivers and pressure sensors. By combining the companies’ airbag-specific product portfolios, Infineon and ADI can offer customers a complete, interoperable, and validated airbag system platform, according to the companies.

The ADI-Infineon collaboration aims to ensure alignment of the companies’ respective product roadmaps and interoperability of their sensors and chipsets, accelerate the development of advanced airbag systems, and provide access for automotive safety system suppliers and OEMs to a complete design platform that will enable a reliable, cost-efficient and easy-to-use advanced airbag solution.

“In emerging car markets, such as Asia and South America, car manufacturers and system suppliers face the challenge of improving passenger safety while reducing cost. By aligning ADI’s and Infineon’s airbag-specific product roadmaps, we will trim interoperability risks, help cut system development costs, and enable carmakers and system suppliers to focus more of their development resources on crash algorithm development and product differentiation,” stated Claus Geisler, SVP in Infineon’s automotive division.

“In response to today’s safety mandates, automotive safety systems require ever increasing levels of system performance to ensure they work properly and reliably for a wide range of passengers and vehicles,” added Mark Martin, VP/GM of Analog Devices’ micromachined products division. “With over 15 years of experience in automotive MEMS and more than 500 million MEMS sensors shipped, ADI brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to the design of safety systems.”

April 23, 2009: A water desalination industry publication is running warnings of potential dangers of nanoparticles used in developing desalination technologies.

The online newsletter Desalination & Water Reuse, cites concerns from Kenneth Donaldson, a toxicology professor at the University of Edinburgh, who said he was concerned about the “potential impacts of manufactured nanoparticles on health.”

Examples of nanomaterials being proposed for water treatment membranes are carbon nanotubes or nanocapillary arrays for nanofiltration and nanoreactive membranes. The article cited studies where nanotubes demonstrated “asbestos-like behavior.”

April 22, 2009: Utah and Texas researchers have learned how quiet sounds are magnified by bundles of tiny, hair-like tubes atop “hair cells” in the ear: when the tubes dance back and forth, they act as “flexoelectric motors” that amplify sound mechanically.

“We are reporting discovery of a new nanoscale motor in the ear,” says Richard Rabbitt, the study’s principal author and a professor and chair of bioengineering at the University of Utah College of Engineering, in a statement. “The ear has a mechanical amplifier in it that uses electrical power to do mechanical amplification.”

“It’s like a car’s power steering system,” he adds. “You turn the wheel and mechanical power is added. Here, the incoming sound is like your hand turning the wheel, but to drive, you need to add power to it. These hair bundles add power to the sound. If you did not have this mechanism, you would need a powerful hearing aid.”

The new study is published in PLoS ONE, a journal published by the Public Library of Science. Co-authors include Katie Breneman, a bioengineering doctoral student at the University of Utah, and William Brownell, a professor of otolaryngology (ear, nose and throat medicine) at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

The researchers speculate flexoelectrical conversion of electricity into mechanical work also might be involved in processes such as memory formation and food digestion.

Dancing cells and hair-like tubes in your ears

Previous research elsewhere indicated that hair cells within the cochlea of the inner ear can “dance” — elongate and contract — to help amplify sounds.

The new study shows sounds also may be amplified by the back-and-forth flexing or “dancing” of “stereocilia,” the 50-300 hair-like nanotubes projecting from the top of each hair cell.

Such flexing converts an electric signal generated by incoming sound into mechanical work — namely, more flexing of the stereocilia — thereby amplifying the sound by what is known as a flexoelectric effect.

“Dancing hairs help you hear,” says Breneman. The study “suggests sensory cells in the ear are compelled to move when they hear sounds, just like a music aficionado might dance at a concert. In this case, however, they’ll dance in response to sounds as miniscule as the sound of your own blood flow pulsating in your ear.”

In a yet-unpublished upcoming study, Rabbitt, Breneman and Brownell find evidence the hair cells themselves — like the stereocilia bundles atop those cells — also amplify sound by getting longer and shorter due to flexoelectricity.

Rabbitt and Brownell estimate the combined flexoelectric amplification — by both hair cells and the hair-like stereocilia atop hair cells — makes it possible for humans to hear the quietest 35 to 40 decibels of their range of hearing. Rabbitt says the flexoelectric amplifiers are needed to hear sounds quieter than the level of comfortable conversation.

“The beauty of the amplifier is that it allows you to hear very quiet sounds,” Brownell says. Rabbit says that because hair cells die as people age, older people often “need a hearing aid because amplification by the hair cells is not working.”

Because hair-like stereocilia also are involved in our sense of balance, the flexing of stereocilia not only contributes to hearing, but “also likely is involved in our sense of gravity, motion and orientation — all the things needed to have balance,” Rabbitt says.

The new study is part of an effort by researchers to understand the amazing sensitivity of human hearing. Rabbitt says the hair cells are so sensitive they can detect sounds almost as small as those caused by Brownian motion, which is the irregular movement of particles suspended in gas or liquid and bombarded by molecules or atoms.

An amplifier for all sorts of ears

Hair cells are inside the inner ears of many animals. They are within the ear’s cochlea, which is the spiral, snail-shell-shaped cavity where incoming sound vibrations are converted into nerve impulses and sent to the brain. Incoming sounds must be amplified because incoming sound waves are “damped” by fluid that fills the inner ear. Hair cells are about 10μm wide, and 30-100μm long. By comparison, a human hair is roughly 100μm wide. The hair-like stereocilia tubes poking out the top of a hair cell are each a mere 1-10μm long and about 200nm wide.


Cross-section of part of the cochlea, the fluid-filled part of the inner ear that converts vibrations from incoming sounds into nerve signals that travel to the brain via the auditory nerve. University of Utah and Baylor College of Medicine researchers found evidence that stereocilia — bundles of tiny hair-like tubes atop “hair cells” in the cochlea — dance back and forth to mechanically amplify incoming sounds via what is known as the “flexoelectric effect.” (Credit: William Brownell, Baylor College of Medicine)

Brownell says the new study shows how the flexoelectric effect “can account for the amplification of sound in the cochlea.”

Stereocilia essentially are membranes that have been rolled into tiny tubes, so “the fact that a membrane can generate acoustic [mechanical] energy is novel,” says Brownell. “Imagine hearing a soap bubble talk.”

Flexoelectricity in a membrane was noted a few decades ago when a researcher in Europe showed that flexing or bending a simple membrane in a laboratory generated an electrical field. Then, in 1983, Brownell showed that a hair cell from a guinea pig’s ear changed in length when an electric field was applied to it in a lab dish.

The length of stereocilia changes along the coiled length of the cochlea. Different lengths are sensitive to different frequencies of sound. And different animals have different ranges of stereocilia lengths.

Breneman and colleagues devised math formulas and used computer simulations to arrive at the new study’s key finding: The flexoelectric amplifier can explain why varying lengths of stereocilia predict which sound frequencies are heard most easily by a variety of animals, from humans to bats, mice, turtles, chickens and lizards.

“They found that a longer stereocilium was more efficient if it was receiving low-frequency sounds,” while shorter stereocilia most efficiently amplified high-frequency sound, Brownell says.

Breneman says scientists now know of five ways the ears amplify sound, and “what makes this one unique is that it would be present in the stereocilia bundles of all hair cells, not only outer hair cells.”

The cochleae of humans and other mammals have “inner hair cells” that sense sound passively and active “outer hair cells” that amplify sounds. Other higher animals have hair cells, without a distinction between inner and outer.

Because the new study shows the dancing hair-like stereocilia act like an amplifier on any hair cell, “it explains how this amplifier may work in all higher animals like birds and reptiles, not just humans,” Rabbitt says.

How the amplifier works in the inner ear — and perhaps elsewhere

When sound enters the cochlea and reaches the hair cells, sound pressure makes the hair-like stereocilia tubes “pivot left or right similar to the way a signpost bends in heavy wind,” Breneman says.

The tops of the tubes are connected to each other by protein filaments. Where each filament comes in contact with the top end of a stereocilium tube, there is an “ion channel” that opens and closes as the bundle of stereocilia sway back and forth.

When the channel opens, electrically charged calcium and potassium ions flow into the tubes. That changes the electric voltage across the membrane encasing each stereocilium, making the tubes flex and dance even more.

Such flexoelectricity amplifies the sound and ultimately releases neurotransmitter chemicals from the bottom of the hair cells, sending the sound’s nerve signal to the brain, Breneman says.

“We’ve got these nanotubes — stereocilia — moving left and right and converting electrical power [from ions] into mechanical amplification of sound-induced vibrations in the ear,” Rabbitt says. He says the “flexoelectric motor” is the collective movement of the stereocilia in response to sound.

Brownell says the new study — showing that sound is amplified by “dancing” membrane tubes atop hair cells — adds to growing evidence that membranes do not “just sit there,” but instead are “dynamic structures capable of doing work using a mechanism called flexoelectricity.”

Brownell and Rabbitt note that stereocilia involved in amplifying hearing have similarities with other tube-like structures in the human body, such as villi in the gut, dendritic spines on the signal-receiving ends of nerve cells, and growth cones on the signal-transmitting axon ends of growing nerve cells.

So they speculate flexoelectricity may play a role in how villi in the intestines help absorb food and how nerves grow and repair themselves.

“There is some evidence that dendrites and axons change their diameter during intracellular voltage changes, and that could well have flexoelectric origins,” says Rabbitt. “Any time you have a membrane with small diameter — like in axons, dendrites and synaptic vesicles [located between nerve cells], there will be large flexoelectric forces and effects. Therefore, the flexoelectric effect may be at work in things like learning and memory. But that’s pretty speculative.”

April 22, 2009: For the past four years, researchers from four different French institutions have joined forces to create the NanoTrendChart to assess development of nanosciences and technologies worldwide.

NanoTrendChart received about $400,000 over a four-year period from the French National Research Agency (ANR).

NanoTrendChart analyses different dimensions of the evolution of Nanosciences and technologies to support and guide firms, public decision makers and other stakeholders who have a vested interest in these developments.

“Our team of 12 researchers is creating a tool that will enable different key actors in the field to keep track of the worldwide evolution of nanotechnologies,” said Vincent Mangematin, project leader and professor at Grenoble Ecole de Management. “Our objective is to produce a nanotech map to understand the socio-economic impact of nanotech developments.”

The project team deals with 3 basic questions:

  • Where are nanosciences and technologies most developed? Asia, including China, is predictably an interesting track to follow.
  • Who develops the nanosciences and technologies?
  • Finally, the aim is to identify the scientific subfields where nanotechnologies have developed the most.

“The tools that can help researchers produce hypotheses regarding these somewhat basic questions have been missing,” Mangematin said. “This is why the observatory of nanosciences and technologies has been established: To analyze the world of nanotechnologies retrospectively in order to be able to characterize ongoing trends within this scientific field.”

April 21, 2009: At this week’s Design, Automation & Test in Europe conference, IMEC is presenting a new design strategy for brain implants, which it used to create a prototype multi-electrode stimulation and recording probe for deep-brain stimulation.

With this development, IMEC highlights the opportunities in the healthcare market for design tool developers. Brain implants for electrical stimulation of specific brain areas are used as a last-resort therapy for brain disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, tremor, or obsessive-compulsive disorder. Today’s deep-brain stimulation probes use millimeter-size electrodes. These stimulate, in a highly unfocused way, a large area of the brain and have significant
unwanted side effects.

“To have a more precise stimulation and recording, we need electrodes that are as small as individual brain cells (neurons),” said Wolfgang Eberle, senior scientist and project manager at IMEC’s bioelectronics research group. “Such small electrodes can be made with semiconductor process technology, appropriate design tools, and advanced electronic signal processing. At DATE, we want to bring this message to the design community, showing the huge opportunities that the healthcare sector offers.”

IMEC’s design and modeling strategy allows developing advanced brain implants consisting of multiple electrodes enabling simultaneous stimulation and recording. This strategy was used to create prototype probes with 10μm-size electrodes and various electrode topologies.

The design strategy relies on finite-element modeling of the electrical field distribution around the brain probe. This was done with the multi-physics simulation software COMSOL 3.4 and 3.5. The COMSOL tools also enabled investigating the mechanical properties of the probe during surgical insertion and the effects of temperature. The results indicate that adapting the penetration depth and field asymmetry allow steering the electrical field around the probe. This results in high-precision stimulation. Also key to the design approach is developing a mixed-signal compensation scheme enabling multi-electrode probes capable of stimulation as well as recording. This is needed to realize closed-loop systems.

These new design approaches open up possibilities for more effective stimulation with less side effects, reduced energy consumption due to focusing the stimulation current on the desired brain target, and closed-loop control adapting the stimulation based on the recorded effect.


A prototype multi-electrode stimulation and recording probe for deep-brain stimulation. (Photo courtesy of IMEC)