submit news    HOME | FEEDBACK  


« NAVIGATION »
NEWS

- Bio/Medicine

- Chemicals

- Defense

- Drug Delivery

- Education

- Electronics

- Energy

- Events

- Grants

- Industry

- Investment

- Litigation

- Materials

- MEMS

- Nanofabrication

- Nanoparticles

- Nanotubes

- Optics

- Partnership

- Patent

- Products

- Quantum dots

- Research

- Smart Dust

- Software
COMPANIES
EVENTS

- Browse by Month

- Current Shows

- Previous Shows

- Submit Events
FEEDBACK
ADVERTISE
LINK TO US

« PARTNERS »
Become A Nanotechwire Partner

FEI Company

Veeco Instruments

NanoDynamics

Nano Science and Technology Institute

National Nanotechnology Initiative

Nanotechnology at Zyvex

Want to see your Company or Organization listed above? Become A Nanotechwire Partner Today - click here
« NEWSLETTER »



« SEARCH »







4/24/2005 6:38:10 PM
NASA has awarded Rice University’s Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory a four-year, $11 million contract

NASA has awarded Rice University’s Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory a four-year, $11 million contract to produce a prototype power cable made entirely of carbon nanotubes.

The new project will be discussed with media in a briefing at the Johnson Space Center at 2 p.m. CDT April 26. Available to media in that session will be:

  • Jefferson D. Howell, Jr., Director, NASA Johnson Space Center
  • Richard Smalley, Director, Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory (CNL)

The project aims to pioneer methods of producing pure nanotube power cables, known as quantum wires, which may conduct electricity up to 10 times better than copper and weigh about one-sixth as much. Such technologies may advance NASA's plans to return humans to the moon and eventually travel to Mars and beyond.

“Technology advances like these are exactly what will be needed to realize the future of space exploration,” Howell said. “We are extremely fortunate to be able to pool the unique expertise available at JSC, Rice and the other collaborators in this effort.”

The contract was awarded by NASA’s Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. It calls for an additional $4 million in related research at JSC, where researchers will conduct crucial work in the area of nanotube growth, and at NASA’s Glenn Research Center, where nanotube composites will be developed for fuel cell components.

Rice’s portion of the funding includes support for collaborative projects at Houston-based Carbon Nanotechnologies Inc., which specializes in large-scale nanotube production; GHG Corp.; Duke University and the University of Pennsylvania.

“In the Space Shuttle, the primary power distribution system accounts for almost 7 percent of the craft’s weight,” said Smalley, University Professor, the Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry, professor of physics and the lead researcher on the project.. “To support additional instrumentation and broadband communications, NASA’s next generation of human and robotic spacecraft will need far more power. For ships assembled in orbit, a copper power distribution system could wind up accounting for one-quarter the weight of the vessel.”

The contract calls for CNL to provide NASA a one-meter prototype of a quantum wire by 2010. This will require major breakthroughs in the production and processing of nanotubes. Notably, a way has yet to be found to produce a specific type of nanotube, and of the hundreds of types available, only about 2 percent are pure metals. These metallic tubes – also known as “armchair” nanotubes – are the only types that conduct electricity well enough for quantum wires.

“We need to find a way to make just the nanotubes we want, and we need them in large quantities,” said CNL Executive Director Howard Schmidt. “Another major focus of the research will be finding new ways to combine armchair nanotubes, which are single molecules just a billionth of a meter wide, into large-scale fibers and wires.”

The April 26 briefing will be available to media in attendance only and will not be broadcast on NASA Television.

Other Headlines from NASA Ames Center for Nanotechnology ...
 - NASA Studies How Spaceflight Affects Bacteria
 - Raydiance Partners with NASA Ames to Develop Advanced Microfluidics Technology for Space Applications
 - CombiMatrix Receives New Contract From NASA
 - NASA Nanotechnology-Based Biosensor Helps Detect Biohazards
 - NASA Technology Forms the Basis for a New Nanotechnology Company

Other Headlines from Rice University ...
 - Silicon oxide circuits break barrier
 - Rice study measures physical effects of evolution at molecular scale
 - Nano nights detail a world of tiny wonders
 - Timely technology sees tiny transitions
 - Polymers get a push - New theory aids researchers studying DNA, protein transport

More Partnership Headlines ...
 - SEMATECH and Dai Nippon Printing Collaborate to Develop Advanced Process Technologies at UAlbany NanoCollege
 - Spheric Technologies' High-Temperature Continuous Production Microwave Furnace Now Operating at Alfred University NanoMaterials Innovation Center
 - Inter-regional Nanotechnology Partnership Becomes Reality as UAlbany and SUNYIT Spur High-tech Economic Opportunity
 - NanoKTN Facilitates Partnership between Bio Nano Consulting and The School of Pharmacy, University of London
 - Florida State University Selects Optomec Aerosol Jet Solution to Print Next Generation Embedded Sensors


« Back To List »

« GET LISTED »
- submit company
- submit news
- submit events
- advertise here

« EVENTS »
Symposium on Ultra Clean Processing of Semiconductor Surfaces (UCPSS)
The purpose of the UCPSS symposium to increase the level of understanding on ultra-clean processing technology in all steps of the IC-production, PV and bioelectronics.

9TH International Symposium on Scanning Probe Microscopy & Optical Tweezers in Life Sciences
JOINT MEETING 2010 - A forum for applications in scanning probe and optical tweezers technologies in life sciences.

Nanomedicine: Reality Now and Soon - ESF-UB Conference in Biomedicine
This conference aims to provide detailed understanding and discuss the clinical utility of those areas of nanomedicine which are close to application or already clinically applied/on the market.

- More Events


Copyright © 2010 Nanotechwire.com | Privacy Policy |