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News: Green Design & Manufacturing
Engineers Develop Faster 3D Printing Process
Although 3D printing — or direct digital manufacturing — has the potential to revolutionize various industries by providing faster, cheaper, and more accurate manufacturing options, fabrication time and the complexity of multimaterial objects have been a longtime hurdle to its widespread use in the...
Videos: Robotics, Automation & Control
Building on previous work in real-time vision-based human robot interaction, researchers at Simon Fraser University's Autonomy Lab have demonstrated the ability to command teams...
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News
Army and University Study Could Improve Aviation Vibration Testing
Results from a recent study that looked at how battlefield-born vibrations, like those from blasts and heavy armored vehicles, for example, are leading research scientists to rethink military vehicle testing and evaluation methods that could also, eventually, improve automotive and...
News
Wrangling Flow to Quiet Future Aircraft
Plasmas are a soup of charged particles in an electric field, and are normally found in stars and lightning bolts. With the use of high voltage equipment, very small plasmas can be used to manipulate fluid flows. In recent years, the development of devices known as plasma actuators has advanced the promise of...
News
Crashing Rockets Could Lead to Novel Sample-Return Technology
During spring break the last five years, a University of Washington class has headed to the Nevada desert to launch rockets and learn more about the science and engineering involved. Sometimes, the launch would fail and a rocket smacked hard into the ground. This year, the session...
News: Aerospace
NASA Researchers Get Flying Insects to Bug Off Airplane Wings
A bee and a jumbo jet: common sense would tell you that the tiny insect couldn't possibly cause any troubles for the massive airplane, right? Actually, no. Bees can cause trouble. When flying insects get in the way of an airplane's wing during takeoff or landing, it's not just the bugs...
Videos: Green Design & Manufacturing
The production volumes of cotton can't keep growing due to the volumes of water and cultivation area it demands, says researcher Michael Hummel of Finland's Aalto University....
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Videos: Materials
University of Southern California Viterbi School of Engineering professor, Yong Chen, discusses the 3D printing technique demonstrated in his most recent paper, which he will present at...
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News
Analysis Explains Shifting Winds in Turbine Arrays
Researchers modeling how changes in air flow patterns affect wind turbine output power have found that the wind can supply energy from an unexpected direction: below. The researchers introduced a mathematical way to measure changes in the flow that gives a more accurate representation of the...
News
Simulation Helps Predict Life Expectancy of Solar Modules
Solar panel modules must fulfill certain standards to be approved for operation. This involves exposing them to high temperatures and high mechanical loading. However, the results only predict something about the robustness of a brand-new sample with respect to extreme, short-term loading....
News: Software
NASA Software Offers Pilots the Best Path
NASA-developed computer software could help aircraft operators save time and fuel by allowing technology in the cockpit to help determine the most efficient flight paths while planes are in the air - in traffic - en route to their destinations.A concept called Traffic Aware Strategic Aircrew Requests, or...
News: Green Design & Manufacturing
Water-Splitting Device Generates Electricity
Stanford researchers have developed an inexpensive device that uses light to split water into oxygen and clean-burning hydrogen. The goal is to supplement solar cells with hydrogen-powered fuel cells that can generate electricity when the sun isn't shining or demand is high.Two semiconducting electrodes...
Videos: Test & Measurement
Plasmonic nanostructures confine light on the nanoscale, enabling ultra-compact optical devices that exhibit strong light–matter interactions. Quantum dots are ideal...
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Question of the Week
Would You Use an All-In-One 'Coin?'
A San Francisco startup introduced an all-in-one card, called Coin, meant to store financial information from every other card carried in a wallet. The device, available for preorder, includes a magnetic strip that can change depending on what card one wants to use. What do you think? Would you use an all-in-one...
Videos: Aerospace
All over Earth, lightning occurs some 50 times a second - yet the details of what initiates this common occurrence and what effects it has on the atmosphere...
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Products: Electronics & Computers
AutomationDirect (Cumming, GA) has released the latest addition to its PLC offerings, the Do-more T1H Series PLC. Using the proven Terminator field I/O hardware as a platform, the Do-moreT1H PLC supports stackable base units, discrete and...
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Products: Electronics & Computers
Saelig Company, Inc. (Fairport, NY) recently announced the availability of the new PicoScope 2000 series oscilloscopes, which are 80% smaller than their predecessors, similar in size to a passport but ¾" thick....
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Products: Electronics & Computers
ON Semiconductor (Phoenix, AZ) has introduced two new AEC Qualified ICs optimized for automotive powertrain and in-cabin deployment. Running off a 2V to 44V input voltage, the NCV8876 non-synchronous boost controller with...
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Products: Electronics & Computers
Altium Limited (Sydney, Australia) has announced Software Platform, which delivers ultra-rapid prototyping and development for ARM Cortex-M based microcontrollers. The Software Platform includes a comprehensive range...
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News
New Device Stores Electricity On Silicon Chips
Solar cells that produce electricity 24/7, not just when the sun is shining, or mobile phones with built-in power cells that recharge in seconds and work for weeks between charges. These are just two of the possibilities raised by a novel supercapacitor design invented by material scientists at...
News
Digitized Touch Could Revolutionize Communications
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego report a breakthrough in technology that could pave the way for digital systems to record, store, edit and replay information in a dimension that goes beyond what we can see or hear, namely touch. “Touch was largely bypassed by the digital...
News: Medical
Collaboration to Advance Silicon Nanotech and Personal Healthcare
Researchers and physicians at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, will collaborate with the nanoelectronics R&D center Imec, Leuven, Belgium, to advance silicon applications in healthcare, beginning with development of a device to enable a broad range of clinical tests. The...
Industry News: Medical
November Mid-Month Industry News
Here is the latest batch of news from the medical products community. Please click the link for more.
INSIDER: Robotics, Automation & Control
Building an MRI-Guided Robotic Heart Catheter
A team of researchers at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, have received a $1.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health for its project to perfect the technology to steer a robotic catheter through the heart’s beating chambers using the push and pull of magnetic fields while...
News: Medical
New Report on Disposable Medical Sensors Market
A new report forecasting the growth of the Disposable Medical Devices Sensors Market to 2018 has been issued that says that the global disposable devices sensors market is technology driven and marked by the "threat of obsolescence," wherein technologies and their adoption change very rapidly. The...
News: Materials
Center for the Polyurethanes Industry Seeking Papers
The Center for the Polyurethanes Industry (CPI) of the American Chemistry Council has issued a call for papers and posters to be presented at the 2014 Polyurethanes Technical Conference, which will take place September 22-24, 2014 at the Gaylord Texan in Dallas, Texas.
News: Medical
Launch of the World Plastics Council
Top executives from plastics resin producers gathered during the 2013 K Fair, in DuŸsseldorf, Germany, the world's largest plastics industry exhibition, and agreed to launch the World Plastics Council, to be the voice of global plastics manufacturers and to facilitate a united approach to address global...
Videos: Mechanical & Fluid Systems
Chemical engineers at MIT have designed minuscule particles that can "steer" themselves along preprogrammed trajectories and align themselves to flow through the center of a...
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INSIDER: Medical
Soluble Polymer Allows Writing in Liquid with Light
Researchers from the Laboratory of Polymer Chemistry in the University of Helsinki’s Department of Chemistry in Finland have managed to draw in an alcohol-based solution using laser light. The research was published in the journal, Macromolecules.

Ask the Expert

Ralph Bright on the Power of Power Cords
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Understanding power system components and how to connect them correctly is critical to meeting regulatory requirements and designing successful electrical products for worldwide markets. Interpower’s Ralph Bright defines these requirements and explains how to know which cord to select for your application.

Inside Story

Inside Story: Trends in Packaging and Sterilization
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Eurofins Medical Device Testing (MDT) provides a full scope of testing services. In this interview, Eurofins’ experts, Sunny Modi, PhD, Director of Package Testing; and Elizabeth Sydnor, Director of Microbiology; answer common questions on medical device packaging and sterilization.