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        <title>NanoDynamics</title>
        <description>NanoDynamics Journal</description>
        <link>http://www.NanoDynamics.com/index.php</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Tue, 27 May 2008 11:26:03 -0800</lastBuildDate>
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            <title>John Ruberto Hired as President of NanoDynamics Energy</title>
            <link>http://www.ndenergy.com/viewer.php?page=news&amp;item=0</link>
            <description>NanoDynamics Energy, a subsidiary of NanoDynamics, has announced the hire of John Ruberto as president.  Ruberto will be responsible for commercialisation efforts in relation to the company’s Revolution Series of micro-tubular solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs), which offer advantages including fuel flexibility and integrated hydrocarbon reforming.

Ruberto most recently served at Applied Nanotech as S.V.P. of programs, expanding the company’s intellectual property portfolio, backlog and revenue generation.

Prior to that he was president of power at Eagle Picher, and also served in the role of E.V. P. of strategy. Ruberto also served as V.P. for Aerojet-General and V.P of business development and strategy for Aerojet-General

From 1994 to 1998 Ruberto was a principal deputy assistant to the Secretary of Defense, directing arms control initiatives, overseeing system acquisition responsibilities – including the U.S. nuclear weapons and chemical weapons stockpiles, and managing operations for the Defense Special Weapons and the On-Site Inspection Agencies. He also managed the Cooperative Threat Reduction program, and was awarded the Distinguished Public Service Medal for his contributions to the defense of the U.S. .

Source: Fuel Cell Today
</description>
            <author>Fuel Cell Today &lt;a@a.com&gt;</author>
            <pubDate>Fri, 23 May 2008 09:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
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            <title>Alternative Energy Suppliers Look to Nano-Manufacturing</title>
            <link>http://www.ndenergy.com/viewer.php?page=news&amp;item=1</link>
            <description>Paula Doe, SEMI -- 10/17/2006
Semiconductor International

Developers of fuel cells, solar cells and next-generation lithium ion batteries are looking to new nano-manufacturing technologies to enable their smaller and cheaper solutions to generating energy. “The real issues now in the alternative energy world,” said Ged McLean, president and CTO at Angstrom Power (North Vancouver, B.C., Canada), “are all about nano-manufacturing.”

McLean’s company is looking for ways nano-manufacturing can improve its microstructured fuel cells. High-profile thin-film solar cell suppliers Nanosolar (Palo Alto, Calif.) and Konarka Technologies (Lowell, Mass.) are counting on nanostructured materials to enable printing their low-cost thin films on flexible substrates. And Angela Belcher’s group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT, Cambridge, Mass.) is now focusing on getting its viruses to assemble alloys for electrodes for lithium ion batteries with much higher energy density.

SEMI is bringing these and other leading nanotechnology researchers and users together with the electronics process technology supply chain at its NanoForum, Oct. 30-Nov. 2 in San Jose, to discuss manufacturing issues in nano energy, biomedical, defense and electronics markets. “I’m firmly convinced that exposing the semiconductor world to the wide range of things going on in the nanotechnology world – and vice-versa – will be a very good thing for both sides,” said Alan Rae, vice president of marketing and business development for NanoDynamics (Buffalo, N.Y.) and chair of the committee organizing the meeting. “There are lots of things you come across being applied in another area and suddenly realize, ‘Wow, I see where this can be used in my area.’”

Belcher’s group is now applying its biological self-assembly technology to making better batteries. She says her group has improved its genetic engineering in the past year to now be able to change multiple peptides on the virus’s coating – allowing them to assemble alloys instead of just single materials. “We’re able to make larger modifications now and still have it remain stable,” Belcher said.

The main focus of her work with MIT colleagues Paula Hammond and Yet-Ming Chiang is now on energy applications like battery technology, ultracapacitors and solar cells, where low-cost assembly of highly ordered material could significantly improve energy density and reduce size and weight. “I like starting with a simple system, where things don’t have to be perfectly aligned,” she said. “We’re working on a problem we think we can solve.” The current proof of concept work could lead to a working thin-film battery prototype in two years or so. Work on engineering the viruses to serve as the scaffolds for assembling III-V semiconductors like InGaN for the absorbers for solar cells is less further along, since the materials are less compatible with biological processes.

So far, the group has made a self-assembled polymer electrolyte that can be simply coated with a metal oxide anode, and it’s now working on a metal phosphate cathode coating to complete the battery. The anode is made by coating the substrate with long, thin rod-shaped viruses that are genetically engineered to bind to cobalt and gold. The viruses repel each other slightly so they arrange themselves into a tightly aligned monolayer, and coat themselves with metal ions from solution, effectively making a closely packed network of nanowires. Belcher says energy densities are 2-2.5× better than current electrode materials.

In fuel cells, performance could also be much improved, according to Angstrom Power’s McLean, by nanoscale engineering of the catalysts and their support structures. His company makes microstructured fuel cells that use an array of thin pillars of proton exchange membrane to create a large surface area for reaction. It closed on $18M in equity funding in September, and has demonstration projects from the Vancouver airport to the Royal BC Museum using its fuel cell flashlights and rechargers for standard two-way radios and PDAs.

“Catalysts are now made by bucket chemistry, and it’s impossible to know how much of the catalyst is actually being used, or how much is really needed for the reaction,” said McLean, noting that engineering catalysts on a 5-10 nm scale and manufacturing nanostructures is a huge area that’s ripe for development. “I hope a lot of people come up to me after the talk with suggestions of future R&amp;D on how to solve some of these problems,” he added.

High-profile and well-funded solar cell ventures Konarka Technologies and Nanosolar also count on new nanomaterial technologies to print their low-temperature solar films, whether with cold sintered nano crystals of TiO2 coated with light-absorbing dye; or quantum dots, nano templates and nanoparticle ink for CIGS thin films. These low-temperature technologies could mean much of the thin-film photovoltaic market will use printing equipment, not conventional vacuum deposition tools, in coming years. In fact, market researcher NanoMarkets (Glen Allen, Va.) projects printed thin-film photovoltaics will ramp sharply over the next several years to surpass vacuum deposition in dollar value by 2012.

Directly before the NanoForum meeting, leading professors will update industry on nanoelectronics developments in the university world at Nano U, and there will be a workshop on global nano standards. For the complete agenda, see www.semi.org/nanoforum.</description>
            <author>Joelle</author>
            <pubDate>Thu, 19 Oct 2006 21:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
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            <title>Nano World: Power for soldiers, sat phones</title>
            <link>http://www.ndenergy.com/viewer.php?page=news&amp;item=2</link>
            <description>By CHARLES Q. CHOI

NEW YORK, Nov. 8 (UPI) -- Nanotechnology-based power sources are expected to emerge in the next two years that could dramatically reduce the weight that soldiers carry and boost how long satellite phones can last, experts told UPI's Nano World.

Fuel cells generate electricity by reacting fuel with oxygen. NanoDynamicsTM in Buffalo, N.Y., is developing fuel cells that employ nanotechnology to help supply power for longer times at less weight and size than batteries or conventional fuel cells. One 50-watt solid oxide fuel-cell prototype, roughly the size of a loaf of bread, is composed of roughly 20 percent nanomaterials and can generate some 3,000 watt-hours of electricity from just 5 pounds of propane. A conventional solid oxide fuel cell given that little propane would generate only one-half to one-third as many watt-hours.

The prototype, &quot;originally designed for a combat soldier, could replace about 35 pounds of batteries,&quot; said Keith Blakely, chief executive officer at NanoDynamicsTM . He and others discussed their devices at the NanoCommerce &amp; SEMI NanoForum conference in Chicago last week.

NanoDynamicsTM  essentially takes conventional fuel-cell components such as their membranes, electrodes and catalysts and miniaturizes them, increasing fuel-cell power density. Unlike conventional fuel cells, which use hydrogen gas, their prototypes use propane gas, &quot;the kind you find at camping stores,&quot; Blakely said.

NanoDynamicsTM  has programs with the U.S. Army to develop a fuel cell until the end of 2006. &quot;It may not be that a 50-watt system makes sense for a soldier, but maybe a 200- or 250-watt system to recharge batteries for a platoon,&quot; Blakely said.

NanoDynamicsTM  is also developing a second-generation nanotechnology-based fuel cell with 60 percent nanomaterials, for 50-watt systems only three-quarters of an inch long, and a third-generation device made of 80 percent nanomaterials. &quot;We are based on operating at about 800 degrees C, so it's not a pocket device,&quot; Blakely cautioned. &quot;But for a soldier on a three-day mission dealing with the weight of batteries or a wheelchair on a back of a van, it could replace a lot of weight.&quot;

Burnaby, Canada-based Tekion is developing nanotechnology-based fuel cells for phones and computers. Tekion's fuel cells do not use hydrogen either, but formic acid instead, the same kind bees and ants use in their venom. &quot;Formic acid isn't flammable,&quot; said Tekion President and Chief Executive Officer Neil Huff, while being considerably reactive at the same time for relatively high power generation, &quot;which is key to making devices smaller.&quot; They currently employ nanoscale catalysts and membranes and hope to miniaturize the rest of their components as well.

Initially, Tekion is targeting satellite phones and hopes to have its first product out in 2007. &quot;Satellite phones are larger devices, so they give you more space to work with,&quot; Huff said. Moreover, &quot;satellite phones are typically used off-the-grid, so our batteries could help them operate for extended periods of time.&quot;

-- 

Charles Choi covers research and technology for UPI. E-mail: hitech@upi.com

© Copyright 2005 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved</description>
            <author>Joelle</author>
            <pubDate>Tue, 08 Nov 2005 14:45:00 -0800</pubDate>
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