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Thursday, September 21, 2006  

NanoSensors Initiate Testing of Carbon Nanotubes Devices

NanoSensors, Inc., a nanotechnology development company that develops instruments and sensors to detect explosives, chemical and biological agents announced today that it has initiated the laboratory testing of carbon nanotube devices for the purpose of characterization of these devices as field-effect transistors (FET) to detect specific targeted agents. The first testing will be done for targeted bacteria, salmonella and e-coli, to determine detection sensitivity and functionalization parameters.
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MIT materials scientists tame tricky carbon nanotubes

Based on a new theory, MIT scientists may be able to manipulate carbon nanotubes -- one of the strongest known materials and one of the trickiest to work with -- without destroying their extraordinary electrical properties.
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Researchers have attached to the side walls of the tiny tubes chemical molecules that work as "handles" that allow the tubes to be assembled and manipulated. But these molecular bonds also change the tubes' structure and destroy their conductivity.
Now Young-Su Lee, an MIT graduate student in materials science and engineering, and Nicola Marzari, an associate professor in the same department, have identified a class of chemical molecules that preserve the metallic properties of carbon nanotubes and their near-perfect ability to conduct electricity with little resistance.
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