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Edited by Christian Lowe | Contact

Opening the Nano-World

A Defense Tech reader sent this interesting article my way. But, to be honest, I’m not sure what to make of it.

nonmaterial.jpg

I know a little bit about “nanotechnology” but not necessarily enough to really know if this development is significant. But I thought I’d pass it along because DT readers may be able to enlighten me and others on this.

What applications in defense and intelligence might this have? The article mentions research funding was provided by the Army. From what I understand this sol-gel ink solution is a process that could lead to the construction of various nano-structures such as lenses, optics and even fine structures.

Here’s the article:

New sol-gel inks developed by researchers at the University of Illinois can be printed into patterns to produce three-dimensional structures of metal oxides with nanoscale features.

The ability to directly pattern functional oxides at the nanoscale opens a new avenue to functional devices. Potential applications include micro-fuel cells, photonic crystals and gas sensors.

The researchers describe the new inks in a paper accepted for publication in the journal Advanced Materials, and featured on its “Advances in Advance” Web site.

“Using this new family of inks, we have produced features as small as 225 nanometers,” said co-author Jennifer Lewis, the Thurnauer Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and director of the university’s Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory (FSMRL). “Our goal is to get down to 100 nanometer feature sizes.”

To create three-dimensional structures, the researchers use a robotic deposition process called direct-write assembly. The concentrated sol-gel ink is dispensed as a filament from a nozzle approximately 1 micron in diameter (about 100 times smaller than a human hair). The ink is dispensed while a computer-controlled micropositioner precisely directs the path. After the pattern for the first layer is complete, the nozzle is raised and another layer is deposited. This process is repeated until the desired shape is produced.

“We have opened direct ink writing to a new realm of functional materials,” said graduate student Eric Duoss, the paper’s lead author. “Since we print the desired functionality directly, the need for complicated templating and replicating schemes is eliminated.”

Unlike previous inks, which require a liquid coagulation reservoir, the newly formulated inks are concentrated enough to rapidly solidify and maintain their shape in air, even as they span gaps in underlying layers.

“This gives us the ability to start, stop and reposition the flow of ink repeatedly, providing exquisite control over the deposition process,” Duoss said. “For example, we can directly pattern defects in three-dimensional structures for use as photonic crystals.”

After the structures have been assembled, they are converted to the desired functional oxide phase by heating at elevated temperature. Titanium dioxide, which possesses high refractive index and interesting electrical properties, is one material the researchers have successfully produced.

The researchers’ ink design and patterning approach can be readily extended to other materials.

“There are a nearly endless variety of materials to choose from,” Lewis said. “We envision having a toolbox of inks that can print at the micro- and nanoscale. These inks will be used for heterogeneous integration with other manufacturing techniques to create complex, functional devices composed of many different materials.”

In addition to Lewis and Duoss, former post-doctoral researcher Mariusz Twardowski is a co-author of the paper.

(Gouge: BD)

-- Christian

Comments

more detailed information on defence based nanotech

Posted by: surya at September 18, 2008 06:21 AM


more detailed information on defence based nanotech

Posted by: surya at September 18, 2008 06:17 AM


Hello All, still on the mend. Cant get comfortable. So, here I am.
I have been studying not only nano tech, but molecular possibilties in not only the military realm, but the medical realm as well.
There are numerous possibilities for nano tech, some perhaps close in the future, some are years off. First, the supply of certain nano products has yet to be worked out.
However, I can say that there are uses in the following fields that I would see the military definitly being interested. Lens refinement, battery technology upgrading (which is a very big and important addition to the entire economy) Also, I've been waiting for years for the Natick Soldier Center to "put out" what they call "STF" or shear thickening fluid. The further we explore the great expanses, the more we must explore the inner and tiny world. They go hand in hand. I believe people will be surprised at how they end up working together in the end.
There are several nano web "news sites", and yes they do carry on about the "newest and lastest and greatest" but they are worth scanning.
In any event, its a yin/yang situation and they will interface at some point.
Best, DW

Posted by: David Woroner at October 21, 2007 06:30 AM


The reason you don't know what to make of this is that no one else does either, not really.

I've been writing about nano for several years now, (including stuff on nano and defense) and I've seen announcements like this just about weekly. What they amount to is anyone's guess because its simply too early to know.

This might be significant _if_ it works consistently and _if_ someone finds a way to make a useful product with it. Note that there are a number of three-dimensional nano fabrication methods out there in the labs or bench tests. The approach is somewhat novel, but we'll need a lot more testing to know if it is going to prove out.

Nano's real, and it's already changing things. But at this point there are far too many interesting lab results being reported and not nearly enough production or near-production devices.

Posted by: chiropetra at October 18, 2007 09:29 PM


Thanks for the deletion, Christian.

These 3D nano printers sound like microscopic versions of typical stereolithography. Hardly seems like "ink" is the right word for the medium, however.

Posted by: C. Foskey at October 18, 2007 02:32 PM


@CF:

I'd say the text is generated by a chatterbot of some kind, then culled for allusive or evocative stuff, then arranged as a kind of montage/performance art. Offhand, I'd say somebody thinks this is poetic counterpoint to some of the more bellicose statements posted here.

Can't say. It could just as easily be an autospammer test -- e.g., to see who clicks through to the link. The poesy is more intriguing than a Viagra ad.

Either way, it's getting old, fast.

Posted by: demophilus at October 18, 2007 01:06 PM


You just took 2 min of my life I will never get back. Just the wrong place to say it and drugs to live it. So unless you have something to contribute to the topic, which is the point. Go-away, I believe your looking for sensitive_defensetech dot somewhere else.

Posted by: Blake at October 18, 2007 12:43 PM


Is this guy just using a Racter algorithm to make up these posts?

Posted by: C. Foskey at October 18, 2007 12:30 PM


Fuel/manufacture of it has been identified as strategic by the military, so have I read. Consider, the primary cost of war is moving stuff to and from a location.

Battery Technology
Fuel Cells
Manufacturing Processes (Hydrogen, Coal, ???)

I am looking forward to the day when oil is 5 euros/barrel. Then we won't have to subsidize all these knuckleheads whose GDP is oil exports.

Posted by: Blake at October 18, 2007 11:13 AM


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