Nanovip

June 4, 2010

US: Ph.D. (graduate student) opening in nanotechnology and materials science research

Filed under: Latest Posts,Nano Jobs — admin @ 6:54 pm

There is one Ph.D./Graduate student opening the research group of Prof. Nitin Chopra (NPG:http://www.unix.eng.ua.edu/~chopra/ ) in the Metallurgical and Materials Engineering (MTE) Department at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, USA. The selected applicant can also be a part of Materials Science and Engineering Ph.D. program.

The research work will be focused on nanotechnology with an opportunity to gain experience in advanced materials fabrication/synthesis techniques. This may include work in graphene, nanowires, thin film deposition, electron microscopies, and other characterization methods. The research project is highly competitive and rewarding and will provide the selected candidate with an all-round professional and career development.

It is preferred that the applicant has a bachelors degree in Materials Sc./Materials Engg./Metallurgy. However, due to the interdisciplinary nature of the research, majors in sciences as well as other engineering are also encouraged to apply. The graduate student is required to complete full Ph.D. credit hours course work in the MTE department or MSE program.

The position starts in Spring 2010 and interested applicants should submit detailed CV/Resume, statement of research, GRE, TOEFL to nchopra@eng.ua.edu for pre-screening. Deadline is June 25th, 2010. GRE/TOEFL IS MUST FOR THIS POSITION, IF YOU ARE AN INTERNATIONAL APPLICANT (ANY APPLICATIONS WITHOUT GRE AND TOEFL WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED).

To apply: DEADLINE IS June 25TH, 2010. PLEASE SEND ME YOUR CV, STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, GRE,TOEFL, AND OTHER DETAILS DIRECTLY THROUGH E MAIL: nchopra@eng.ua.edu   NOTE: The selected candidate will be required to join before August 18th, 2010.

Modine Names Dr. Suresh Garimella as Advisor to Its Technology Committee

Filed under: Latest Posts,Press Releases — admin @ 6:49 pm

ACINE, Wis., Jun 01, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) –Modine Manufacturing Company (NYSE: MOD), a diversified global leader in thermal management technology and solutions, announced that it has formally engaged Suresh V. Garimella to serve in a consulting capacity to the Technology Committee of the Modine Board of Directors. Garimella is the R. Eugene and Susie E. Goodson Distinguished Professor at Purdue University, where he also serves as Director, Cooling Technologies Research Center within the School of Mechanical Engineering and Birck Nanotechnology Center.

Commenting on the engagement, Modine President and Chief Executive Officer Thomas A. Burke said, “We are thrilled to have Dr. Garimella, a world-renowned expert in the field of heat transfer, join the Modine Technology Committee in an advisory capacity. His expertise, background and interests align perfectly with Modine’s focus on thermal management solutions and our strong commitment to new product innovation.”

Dr. Garimella earned his bachelor of technology in mechanical engineering degree at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras; his master of science in mechanical engineering degree from The Ohio State University; and his Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley. His research interests span a range of disciplines from thermal microsystems to energy efficiency to renewable and sustainable energy systems.

Dr. Garimella also recently received a Jefferson Science Fellowship with the U.S. Department of State, which includes a one-year on-site assignment in Washington, D.C., to advise on science, technology and engineering considerations in the formulation of U.S. foreign policy.

About Modine

With fiscal 2009 revenues of $1.4 billion, Modine specializes in thermal management systems and components, bringing highly engineered heating and cooling technology and solutions to diversified global markets. Modine products are used in light, medium and heavy-duty vehicles, heating, ventilation and air conditioning equipment, off-highway and industrial equipment, refrigeration systems, and fuel cells. The company employs approximately 6,000 people at 32 facilities worldwide in 14 countries. For more information about Modine, visit www.modine.com.

SOURCE: Modine Manufacturing Company

 Modine Manufacturing Company
Susan Fisher, 262-636-8434
s.h.fisher@na.modine.com

Rusnanotech: Application for International Competition of Scientific Papers in Nanotechnology for Young researches

Filed under: Latest Posts,Students — admin @ 6:47 pm

APPLICATION

Green Earth Technologies Rolls Out G-OIL® to Quick-Lubes Retailers Nationwide

Filed under: Latest Posts,Press Releases — admin @ 6:43 pm

Retailers in Hawaii, California, Colorado, Texas, Indiana, Arizona and Florida to Offer “Green” Alternative to their Customers

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y., June 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Green Earth Technologies (Pink Sheets: GETG), a manufacturer of environmentally friendly automotive products, today announced quick-lubes retail distribution deals across the country for Ultimate Biodegradable G-OIL SAE 5W-30 Bio-based Full Synthetic ‘green’ Motor Oil. G-OIL is the world’s first bio-based motor oil to pass the engine test criteria for The American Petroleum Institute (API) SM Certification and be officially granted the API “Donut.”

Consumers looking for an environmentally-friendly auto change with G-OIL can now visit the following quick-lubes: Lube-N-Go (Paso Robles and Atascadero, CA), Honest-One (Phoenix, AZ), Eco-Friendly Auto Center (Oakland Park, FL), Lex Brodie’s Tire Company (Honolulu, Kalihi, Waipahu, Kaneohe, Pearlridge, HI), Tom’s Car Care Center, Inc. (South Bend, IN), Auto Maintenance Man (Austin, TX), Moeller Tire and Lube (Flatonia, TX), Green Garage (Boulder, CO).

“The Quick-Lubes distribution opens the doors for high quality one-on-one interactions with consumers,” says Jeffrey Loch, Green Earth Technologies’ Founder and CMO. “These regional roll outs will build G-OIL brand awareness and demand at the retail level, creating organic brand ambassadors who embrace that changing your oil really can change the world.”
Green Earth Technologies’ G-OIL is not a re-refined or recycled oil, but a blend of nature’s American grown base oils with nanotechnology resulting in a bio-based full synthetic motor oil. These saturated fats, whose molecular single-bond carbon chains are similar to common petroleum oils, have no harsh effects on the environment, and cut dependence on foreign oil and offshore drilling

ABOUT GREEN EARTH TECHNOLOGIES
Green Earth Technologies produces G-branded superior performing green products made with American-grown base oils that utilize the power of nanotechnology to deliver environmentally friendly products with no compromise…meaning, consumers can now “do their part” without having to give up performance or value: Save the Earth — Sacrifice Nothing® is the Company’s tagline. The G-brand family of products include G-OIL®, G-MARINE™, G-FUEL™, G-WASH™, G-GLASS™, G-CLEAN™, G-SCENT™, G-WHEEL™, and G-TIRE™, and are offered in a wide range of automotive categories including performance and appearance chemicals. GET products are now available at The Home Depot, Meijer, Kroger, Albertson’s, Giant, Shop Rite, VIP, National Auto, Fred Meyer, participating ACE & True Value dealers, Redners, Trader Horns, The Andersons, Biggs, Bennett Auto, Frank’s Auto Supermarket and Amazon.com. Please visit www.getg.com for the latest news and in-depth information about GET and its brands.
Statements made in this release that relate to future plans, events, financial results or performance are forward-looking statements as defined under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based upon current information and expectations. Actual results may differ materially from those anticipated as a result of certain risks and uncertainties. Investors should also be aware that while the Company from time to time does communicate with securities analysts, it is against the Company’s policy to disclose to them any material non-public information or other confidential commercial information. Investors should not assume that the Company agrees with any report issued by any analyst or with any statements, projections, forecasts or opinions contained in any such report.
SOURCE Green Earth Technologies

Nanomedicine in the Netherlands

Filed under: Latest Posts,Nano News — admin @ 6:40 pm

Nanotechnology promises employment, sustainability and health. The Dutch government invests heavily in it. But how do we achieve these promises? In preparation for a parliamentary debate about nanotechnology on 21 April 2010, the Rathenau Institute initiated a working visit of MPs to one of the most promising areas of its application: healthcare. This note sets out the promises, challenges and issues surrounding ‘nanomedicine’.

Why nano?

Bacteria, viruses, unhealthy diet or lifestyle, and errors in the genetic code, They all make us sick in different ways. But they also have one thing in common: they all operate at the molecular level. Nanotechnology manipulates and analyses matter at this level and therefore promises groundbreaking insights and solutions. Nanomedicine fits into a long tradition of medical science to search for biological mechanisms of disease at deepening physiological levels. According to researchers and developers, this knowledge shall lead to earlier detection, more accurate treatment of diseases and new treatments such as artificial organs.

Nanotechnology also offers possibilities for the miniaturisation of various medical devices and their integration with (wireless) ICT. Diagnosis and treatment can take place outside the laboratory or clinic, even at the patient’s home. Continuous monitoring of health seems to be within reach, also for healthy people.1 In short, nanotechnology promises a wave of new research areas in medicine and new applications for healthcare.

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June 3, 2010

Mapping Tumor Heterogeneity With Quantum Dots

Filed under: Latest Posts,Nano News — admin @ 6:08 pm

One important discovery made about cancer over the past decade is that as a tumor develops, the molecular identity of its cells begins to diverge. As a result, any given tumor is likely to contain groups of cells with differing genetic makeup, growth rates, and more importantly, susceptibility to specific drug therapies. Now, using a mixture of four quantum dots linked to antibodies that can detect cancer-associated proteins, a research team from Emory University has developed a method for mapping the molecular heterogeneity of human prostate tumor biopsies obtained from cancer patients. This method should be applicable to other types of tumors.

Shuming Nie, the principal investigator of the Emory University and Georgia Institute of Technology Center of Cancer Nanotechnology Excellence, led the research team that developed this new method of characterizing tumor biopsies. The investigators reported their work in the journal ACS Nano.

Dr. Nie and his team chose four proteins to target using monoclonal antibodies. To each antibody, they linked a quantum dot—a brightly fluorescent nanoparticle—that emits light with a unique optical signature. After staining human prostate cancer with the four antibody-quantum dot constructs, the researchers used a commercial multispectral imaging system to acquire fluorescence images of the tissue. They then analyzed the raw spectral data with a computer algorithm capable of sorting out the four optical signatures and creating a map of the locations where each of the four quantum dots accumulated on the tumor samples. These maps revealed complex microenvironments within tumors and identified major differences across biopsies from multiple patients.

These maps also pinpointed areas of the prostate gland undergoing structural changes characteristic of healthy tissue becoming malignant. In fact, the investigators note that their work shows that the architectural changes that occur in prostate cancer likely start with a single malignant cell in regions of the prostate gland known as the luminal and basal layers.

This work, which is detailed in a paper titled, “Molecular Mapping of Tumor Heterogeneity on Clinical Tissue Specimens with Multiplexed Quantum Dots,” was supported in part by the NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer, a comprehensive initiative designed to accelerate the application of nanotechnology to the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of cancer. An abstract of this paper is available at the journal’s Web site.

View abstract

http://nano.cancer.gov/action/news/2010/may/nanotech_news_2010-05-21a.asp

UK: Nanoenergy Engineer

Filed under: Latest Posts,Nano Jobs — admin @ 6:04 pm

This individual will be part of a multidisciplinary team to develop novel energy sources and storage systems which leverage nanotechnology. Examples of potential nanoenergy sources include mechanical MEM/NEMs, thermoelectric, or organic/bio photovoltaic.The individual will also work closely with other sections (nanoelectronics and nanomaterials) of the program. The individual needs to have excellent communication skills and exhibit team work capabilities, as well as being self-directed and motivated.A proven track record of publishing in peer-reviewed technical journals and the creation of intellectual property.

Required Knowledge and Skills 1. Doctorate in physical sciences [physics, chemistry, or material] and/or electrical, mechanical engineering or equivalent. 2. Minimum 3 years experience in energy generation/storage research. 3. Excellent hands-on experience in designing, fabricating and testing energy source system 4. Strong knowledge of nanoscale science and technology. 5. Process lab and characterization experience.

Benefits Excellent Salary and benefits.
Country United Kingdom
City, region London
Discipline Other
Sector Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology
CV Email Application by email

Exceptional Undergraduates Selected for Prestigious Summer Internship Program at UAlbany NanoCollege

Filed under: Latest Posts,Nano Events — admin @ 5:59 pm

Twenty New York State residents are among 22 students chosen to participate

Albany, NY – The College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (“CNSE”) of the University at Albany announced today that 22 exceptional undergraduate students – including 20 New York State residents – have been selected to participate in its prestigious Summer Internship Program.

The student interns, who were chosen from among a highly competitive pool of more than 120 applicants, have academic backgrounds in the physical, chemical, biological or computer sciences, as well as mathematics and engineering. Collectively, they attend 16 colleges and universities, including the University at Albany, Binghamton University, Clarkson University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, SUNY Geneseo, Lehigh University, McGill University, University of Michigan, Mohawk Valley Community College, University of New Haven, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Rochester Institute of Technology, Skidmore College, Stony Brook University, and Universidad de las Americas Puebla.

CNSE’s Summer Internship Program, which begins today and runs through August 11, provides hands-on research experience to qualified undergraduate students who wish to pursue careers in nanoscience, nanoengineering, nanobioscience and the nanotechnology industry.

“Once again this year, we are thrilled to welcome an outstanding group of young scientists to participate in the Summer Internship Program at the UAlbany NanoCollege,” said Dr. Alain E. Kaloyeros, Senior Vice President and Chief Executive Officer of CNSE. “Over the next 10 weeks, these students will find themselves immersed in innovative, hands-on research, working alongside experts from academia and industry while utilizing the most advanced high-tech facilities in the academic world. It is a truly unique and exciting opportunity for the students to both understand and demonstrate the promise and potential of nanotechnology.”

Each intern will work with one or more research programs conducted by CNSE and its global corporate partners, which represent many of the world’s leading technology companies. Students will interact closely with CNSE faculty, staff, post-doctoral researchers and graduate students, and with industrial experts through weekly seminars. A public poster presentation showcasing each intern’s summer research project serves as the capstone of the Summer Internship Program.

About CNSE. The UAlbany CNSE is the first college in the world dedicated to education, research, development, and deployment in the emerging disciplines of nanoscience, nanoengineering, nanobioscience, and nanoeconomics. CNSE’s Albany NanoTech Complex is the most advanced research enterprise of its kind at any university in the world. With over $5.5 billion in high-tech investments, the 800,000-square-foot complex attracts corporate partners from around the world and offers students a one-of-a-kind academic experience. The UAlbany NanoCollege houses the only fully-integrated, 300mm wafer, computer chip pilot prototyping and demonstration line within 80,000 square feet of Class 1 capable cleanrooms. More than 2,500 scientists, researchers, engineers, students, and faculty work on site at CNSE’s Albany NanoTech, from companies including IBM, AMD, GlobalFoundries, SEMATECH, Toshiba, Applied Materials, Tokyo Electron, ASML, Novellus Systems, Vistec Lithography and Atotech. For more information, visit www.cnse.albany.edu.

CNSE Contact:
Steve Janack, CNSE Vice President for Marketing and Communications
(phone) 518-956-7322 (cell) 518-312-5009
(e-mail) sjanack@uamail.albany.edu

Indian Army plans to use micro devices to monitor terrorists

Filed under: Latest Posts,Nano News — admin @ 5:53 pm

The Indian Army plans to induct new-age gadgets such as micro audio bugs and video devices to keep a watch on terrorist hideouts and their meeting places and activities, apparently taking a leaf out of James Bond flicks.

“Possible nano-technology applications are micro-audio bugs and video recording devices with high capacity data storage to plant at likely meeting places of terrorists, over ground agents and sympathisers,” the Army said on the possible uses of Nano-technology products in the ‘Technology Perspective and Capability Roadmap’ for the Defence Ministry.

Nanotechnology is an expected future manufacturing technology that will make most products lighter, stronger, cleaner, less expensive and smaller in size.

“We are planning to use these micro devices, which would be too small to be detected, for keeping a watch on movement and activities of terrorists”, Army officials said here.

“Nano-size air and ground sensors can also be placed in specific areas and activate them when we want to monitor the activities there,” they said.

The Army also envisages use of micro-sized energy devices which can power unattended sensors and devices in remote areas or places which require extremely light weight power sources like light-weight man portable radars, missiles, UAVs and other systems.

source – http://beta.thehindu.com/news/national/article445358.ece

Nanoparticle PSA test predicts if prostate cancer will return

Filed under: Latest Posts,Nano News — admin @ 5:48 pm

Men who have just had their cancerous prostate gland removed have one pressing question for their doctors: Am I cured? But conventional tests haven’t been sensitive enough to provide a concrete answer. Current tests that measure the level of protein called PSA (prostate-specific antigen), which signals the presence of cancer, often detect no PSA, only to have cancer return in up to 40 percent of the cases.

New research from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and the University International Institute for Nanotechnology shows that an ultrasensitive PSA test using nanoparticle-based technology (VeriSens™ PSA, Nanosphere, Inc., research-use-only) may be able to definitively predict after surgery if the cancer is cured long term or if it will recur.

The new test, which is based upon assays invented at Northwestern in the laboratories of co-principal investigator Chad A. Mirkin, is 300 times more sensitive than currently available commercial tests and can detect a very low level of PSA that indicates the cancer has spread beyond the prostate. The test also may pick up cancer recurrence at a much earlier stage, when secondary treatment is most effective for a patient’s survival.

“This test may provide early and more accurate answers,” said co-principal investigator C. Shad Thaxton, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of urology at Feinberg and a member of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. “It detects PSA at levels in the blood that cannot be detected by conventional tests. It may allow physicians to act at the earliest and most sensitive time, which we know will provide the patient with the best chance of long- term survival.”

This ability to quickly detect very low levels of PSA may enable doctors to diagnose men with prostate cancer recurrence years earlier than is currently possible. Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death for men in the United States.Not only may the new test more accurately predict the course of the disease, it also gives an early indication of whether secondary treatments, such as radiation and hormone therapy, are working. If not, then doctors can quickly begin alternative treatment and refer patients to clinical trials.

The study results were presented June 2 at the American Urological Association 2010 Annual Meeting. These and the results of other Northwestern PSA studies will be presented at the meeting by Lee Zhao, Dae Kim and Hannah Alphs, urology residents at Feinberg.

“These studies suggest that the nanotechnology PSA test might become the preferred postoperative PSA test for men who have been treated with radical prostatectomy,” said William Catalona, MD, professor of urology at Feinberg, a physician at Northwestern Memorial Hospital and director of the clinical prostate cancer program at the Lurie Cancer Center. “It should be especially useful in the early identification of men who would benefit from adjuvant postoperative radiation therapy and those who need postoperative salvage radiation therapy for recurrence.“

Catalona, a senior investigator on the study, was the first to demonstrate that the PSA test could be used as a screening test for prostate cancer.

The study confirms and builds on the previous findings of a 2009 pilot study Thaxton conducted with Mirkin, the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, and other colleagues.

PSA is a protein normally secreted out of the prostate cells into the semen in high concentrations. Usually, very little diffuses into the blood stream, and the normal PSA value for men without prostate disease is less than 2 nanograms per milliliter. When the prostate gland has a disease process, such as inflammation, benign enlargement, or cancer, the barriers to PSA diffusion into the blood stream are breached, and PSA levels rise.  In a man who has his cancerous prostate removed, there should be no PSA in the blood except for a minute amount produced by the periurethral glands. However, any PSA produced by cancer recurrence ends up in the blood stream and can be detected earlier with the more sensitive nanotechnology PSA assay.

For the new study, researchers obtained blood serum retrospectively from men whose PSA serum samples had been frozen after surgery and whose assays (blood analysis) showed an undetectable PSA level based on the conventional test. Northwestern researchers then tested those serum samples using the more sensitive nanotechnology-based test. They wanted to see if they could detect PSA at levels below the limit of the conventional test, and if those results could predict the cancer outcome for those patients, who were followed for up to 10 years.

Using the new test, Thaxton and colleagues found that the low and non-rising PSA levels (presumably produced by the normal periurethral glands) of patients meant that the prostate cancer was effectively cured and did not return over a period of at least 10 years. Scientists also found a PSA level higher than that expected from the periurethral glands based on the new test meant the patients would have their disease recur.

As result of the study, researchers were able to assign a PSA level number to a cure for the first time, as well as a number that indicated the disease would recur and if it would recur aggressively. These newly identified levels were below what could have been detected with the conventional PSA test.  The researchers were able to quantify PSA values at less than 0.1 nanograms per milliliter, the clinical limit of detection for commercial assays.

Thaxton said the next step for scientists is a prospective clinical trial to compare the nanoparticle-enhanced PSA assay to traditional PSA assays and determine if earlier detection and treatment can save lives.

Thaxton and Mirkin are shareholders in Nanosphere, Inc., the company that licensed the bio-barcode technology from Northwestern University.

http://www.feinberg.northwestern.edu/news/2010G-June/Nanoparticle_PSA_Test.html

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