Mar 1, 2015

This week in Nano: Week 9 (Feb 23-March 1st)



Recently researchers from Surrey in the UK have reported a method of developing a Zinc Oxide (ZnO) nanowire detector that is 10,000times more sensitive to UV radiation than traditional ZnO detectors. Besides being awesome what does this mean for you? Well the researchers predict applications for this new nanowire ZnO detector in gas and fire and pollution detection (think ultra sensitive smoke alarms) to integration in personal devices. The paper On-chipFabrication of High Performance Nanostructured ZnO UV Detectors is open access from Scientific Reports

An interesting study was recently reported in Biosensors andBioelectronics in which yeast cells (S. cerevisiae) were engineered to contain quantum dots (QDs). These cells where then monitored over generations to see the fate of the QDs after. The fate was tracked using confocal microscopy and fluorescence emission profiles. The researchers found the progeny cells lost their cell-bound QDs during the third generation time (~360min). They also determined (via imaging and cytotoxic tests that the cells were unaffected by the QDs and retained their 'normal cellular growth, cell architecture and metabolic activities'. The paper can be found here.















And in other news this week is the exciting work from Linköping University and Technische Universität München (TUM) has managed to follow and model the motion of a single molecule, trapped in a nanoscale pore. In their paper published in Nature this week they report a method to explore equilibrium thermodynamics of single molecules by confining single molecules to a 2D nanopores using temperature-controlled scanning tunnelling microscopy and carrying out extensive computational modelling.