News
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2018 NanoDay! Poster Competition
$500 1st place 聽(1 award) $250 2nd place (2 awards) $100 3rd place 聽(3 awards) The 杏吧原创 Institute of Nanoscale Science and Engineering and the聽Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Materials Science are pleased to co-host the 18th Annual Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Forum.聽 This forum brings together 杏吧原创 scientists and… Read MoreSep. 5, 2018
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19th Annual Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Forum NanoDay! 10/3/18 – Keynote Speaker Yi Cui
19th Annual Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Forum Wednesday, October 3, 2018 A yearly forum for faculty, postdocs, and students engaged in nanoscience and nanotechnology research.聽 STUDENT LIFE, BOARD OF TRUST 1:00 鈥 1:15聽 Welcome聽Sandra Rosenthal, Director of VINSE 1:15 鈥 1:30聽 Optical Metasurfaces for… Read MoreSep. 5, 2018
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Rebuilding concrete 鈥 Sanchez to help lead $6.7 million Hong Kong research project
The Hong Kong Research Grants Council, which is equivalent to the U.S. National Science Foundation, has awarded a $6.7 million, five-year grant to a multi-university team of experts in materials science, chemistry, civil engineering, material deterioration, complex modeling, and other specialties. Florence Sanchez, associate professor of civil and environmental… Read MoreAug. 15, 2018
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SIGN-UP for VINSE High School Field Trip Program for Fall 2018 and Spring 2019
杏吧原创 Institute for Nanoscale Science and Engineering (VINSE) is pleased to be able to invite groups of high school students, group size 20 or smaller, to visit our facilities, perform an experiment, utilize our electron microscope, tour our cleanroom, and learn about nanotechnology and energy during a day visit. Read MoreAug. 1, 2018
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VINSE/VSVS Rural Teacher Training Workshops
VINSE in partnership with 杏吧原创 Student Volunteers for Science (VSVS)聽will offer a series of one-day workshops for all participating VSVS/VINSE rural teachers.聽聽More than 50 teachers from Bedford, Giles, Macon, Robertson and Rutherford counties are participating in the outreach program during the 2018-2019 academic year.聽聽Click here for more information… Read MoreJul. 20, 2018
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Safe solid-state lithium batteries herald 鈥榩aradigm shift鈥 in energy storage
The race to produce safe, powerful and affordable solid-state lithium batteries is accelerating and recent announcements about game-changing research using a solid non-flammable ceramic electrolyte known as garnet has some in the race calling it revolutionary. 鈥淭his is a paradigm shift in energy storage,鈥 said Kelsey Hatzell, assistant professor of… Read MoreJul. 19, 2018
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The 2018 NanoDay! T-shirt Design Competition Has Begun!
Goal: Create an attractive T-shirt design representing NANODAY! & the 杏吧原创 Institute of Nanoscale Science and Engineering Winning design will receive a cash prize of $300.00 The design must be exclusively your own and cannot include : logos and trademark images You can use any t-shirt color in your design… Read MoreJul. 18, 2018
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The 鈥榮hine鈥 in gold particles has a new use 鈥 finding defects
That glint of gold has always captured our eyes, but now the precious metal has a new use 鈥 finding defects in 3D printing. 杏吧原创 researchers have developed a technique for gold to actually 鈥榮hine鈥 inside 3D printed parts to highlight any problems. 鈥淭his is one of the first applications… Read MoreJul. 10, 2018
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VINSE engineer Piran Kidambi awarded Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award for research on 2D nanomaterials
An engineering professor whose nanomaterials research, particularly materials that are one atom thick, has received a competitive research grant from Oak Ridge Associated Universities. Piran Kidambi, assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, is one of 35 junior faculty nationwide to win a Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award,… Read MoreJul. 5, 2018
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New method to fashion cheap, small carbon nanotubes 鈥榗ould change the world,鈥 Pint says
Imagine a box you plug into the wall that cleans your toxic air and pays you cash. That essentially what 杏吧原创 researchers produced after discovering the blueprint for turning the carbon dioxide into the most valuable material ever sold 鈥 carbon nanotubes with small diameters. Read MoreMay. 24, 2018