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Sep 12, 2016

One-pot synthesis towards sulfur-based organic semiconductors

Posted by in category: materials

Advancing efforts around Synthetic Bio into the semiconductor space.

“We hope that ongoing advances in our method may lead to the development of new organic electronic devices, including semiconductor and luminescent materials,” say Segawa and Itam.


Thiophene-fused polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are known to be useful as organic semiconductors due to their high charge transport properties. Scientists have developed a short route to form various thiophene-fused PAHs by simply heating mono-functionalized PAHs with sulfur. This new method is expected to contribute towards the efficient development of novel thiophene-based electronic materials.

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Sep 12, 2016

Metal to insulator transition understood

Posted by in categories: energy, physics

Physicists have for the first time succeeded in directly visualising on small scales how a material abruptly changes its state from conducting to insulating at low temperatures. Researchers Erik van Heumen of the University of Amsterdam and Alex McLeod from the University of California thereby provide evidence for a 60-year-old theory that explains this phenomenon and pave the way for more energy efficient technologies. The team’s experiments are described in the latest edition of Nature Physics.

Materials that conduct electricity at high temperature but are insulating at lower temperatures have been known for decades. However, until recently it was not possible to directly measure how such phase transitions proceed on small length scales. Using a new technique, Van Heumen and McLeod are now able to visualise the changes taking place in the material during such a phase transition on the nanometer scale.

In their experiments, the team observed a so-called percolation transition taking place among the electrons in the material. Above a certain critical temperature, the electrons can move relatively easily through the material enabling the flow of electrical current. When the temperature drops below a threshold temperature, small imperfections in the material trigger a kind of traffic jam for the electrons. Starting from small nanometer length scales, this traffic jam slowly grows outwards across the entire material. The previously freely moving electrons come to an abrupt halt and the material loses its conducting properties.

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Sep 12, 2016

Chip will bring the highest level of encryption possible to any device

Posted by in categories: computing, encryption, quantum physics

Engineers at The Institute of Photonic Sciences in Barcelona, Spain have developed a fast random number generator based on a quantum mechanical process.

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Sep 12, 2016

The Universe expands equally in all directions — and this is bad news for Einstein’s equations

Posted by in categories: information science, space

Zoom out far enough, and the Universe is a pretty homogenous place.

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Sep 12, 2016

This Rice-Sized Sensor Implants In Your Brain To Control Prosthetics

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, neuroscience

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Sep 12, 2016

Robô ATLAS aprendendo novas habilidades

Posted by in category: transhumanism

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Sep 12, 2016

Jeff Bezos’s New Rocket, Built to Carry Payloads and People — By Marina Koren | The Atlantic

Posted by in categories: space, space travel

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“The founder of spaceflight company Blue Origin announced Monday the design of an orbital rocket called New Glenn.”

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Sep 12, 2016

Face Transplant: One Year Later

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The unprecedented success of this firefighter’s face transplant surpassed even his doctors’ expectations.

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Sep 12, 2016

This app turns spoken words into sign language

Posted by in category: futurism

Click on photo to start video.

This virtual character can translate speech into sign language when held up to a hearing person.

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Sep 12, 2016

Your First Look At What It Would Be Like to Ride the Hyperloop Pod

Posted by in categories: futurism, transportation

https://youtube.com/watch?v=VF1rt1-Y6vY

Want to know what it looks like to travel at the speed of sound…in a windowless pod? Well, here you go.

What would it be like to ride on the Hyperloop—the 700 mph (1,100 km/h) propulsion-driven transportation of the future?

Continue reading “Your First Look At What It Would Be Like to Ride the Hyperloop Pod” »