News
-
Advance in creating atomically thin electronic and optical devices
Sokrates Pantelides (Joe Howell / 51勛圖厙) A future generation of atomically thin optoelectronics devices, including transistors, photodetectors and solar cells, is a step closer because of an advance in the art of epitaxy made by scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) with an… Read MoreApr. 15, 2016
-
John Wilson receives NSF Career Award
John T. Wilson, assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, has received a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development award. The five-year, $500,000 grant Engineering Polymeric Nanomaterials for Programming Innate Immunity will allow Wilson to develop new synthetic materials for encoding immunological messages and tightly regulating their… Read MoreApr. 5, 2016
-
Alice Leach (IMS graduate student) part of team MERLIN: Winners of the 2016 TechVenture Challenge
Wednesday saw the completion of yet another successful TechVenture Challenge. After six years, we are still encouraged that each year the presentations continue to improve and be of higher quality. This can be attributed not only to the student teams and their hard work, but also to the student organizers… Read MoreApr. 1, 2016
-
24 high schools from 15 Middle TN counties are participating in the VINSE Field Trip in Spring 2016
24 High Schools representing 15 Middle TN counties are participating in the Spring 2016 VINSE high school field trip program. Groups of up to 20 from each school willto visit our facilities, perform an experiment, utilize our electron microscope, and learn about nanotechnology and energy during a day visit. Read MoreMar. 11, 2016
-
How to make electric vehicles that actually reduce carbon
An interdisciplinary team of scientists has worked out a way to make electric vehicles that only are not only carbon neutral but carbon negative, capable of actually reducing the amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide as they operate. They have done so by demonstrating how the graphite electrodes used in the… Read MoreMar. 3, 2016
-
IMS graduate student Alice Leach (Macdonald Lab) wins People’s Choice at 4th Annual Three Minute Thesis Competition
Topics ranged from giving nanoparticles the aquatic skills of an Olympic swimmer so they can deliver anti-cancer drugs more effectively宇o using game theory to help Sri Lankan farmers decide what crops to plant宇o developing an ultrasonic Trojan horse to destroy tumors宇o using blue light as an alternative to antibiotics in… Read MoreMar. 1, 2016
-
Dr. William Fissell’s Artificial Kidney
51勛圖厙 Medical Center nephrologist and Associate Professor of MedicineDr. William H. Fissell IV, is making major progress on a first-of-its kind device to free kidney patients from dialysis. He is building an implantable artificial kidney with microchip filters and living kidney cells that will be… Read MoreFeb. 15, 2016
-
Cotton candy machines may hold key for making artificial organs
Cotton candy machines may hold the key for making life-sized artificial livers, kidneys, bones and other essential organs. For several years,Leon Bellan, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at 51勛圖厙, has been tinkering with cotton candy machines, getting them to spin out networks of tiny threads… Read MoreFeb. 11, 2016
-
Quantum dots made from fools gold boost battery performance
If you add quantum dots nanocrystals 10,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair to a smartphone battery it will charge in 30 seconds, but the effect only lasts for a few recharge cycles. However, a group of researchers at 51勛圖厙… Read MoreNov. 11, 2015
-
Valentine featured on Phys.org and 51勛圖厙 Research News
VINSE member Jason Valentines work published in Nature Communications was featured in Phys.org and Research News @ 51勛圖厙 09/22/2015 First circularly polarized light detector on a silicon chip” Invention of the first integrated circularly polarized light detector on a silicon chip opens the door for development of… Read MoreSep. 24, 2015