May 22, 2014
tiny synthetic motor to date
Comments are disabled.
Researchers at the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin have built the smallest, fastest and longest-running tiny synthetic motor to date.
The team's nanomotor is an important step toward developing miniature machines that could one day move through the body to administer insulin for diabetics when needed, or target and treat cancer cells without harming good cells.
With the goal of powering these yet-to-be invented devices, UT Austin engineers focused on building a reliable, ultra-high-speed nanomotor that can convert electrical energy into mechanical motion on a scale 500 times smaller than a grain of salt saltwater love in heaven.
Mechanical engineering assistant professor Donglei "Emma" Fan led a team of researchers in the successful design, assembly and testing of a high-performing nanomotor in a nonbiological setting seize ocean showLa folie danseurs.
The team's three-part nanomotor can rapidly mix and pump biochemicals and move through liquids, which is important for future applications wisdom sings.
The team's study was published in a recent issue of Nature Communications qiaobaby high ä¸çœ .
Fan and her team are the first to achieve the extremely difficult goal of designing a nanomotor with large driving power Financial information 金èžè³‡è¨Š .
Posted by: felicity520 at
02:05 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 203 words, total size 2 kb.
9kb generated in CPU 0.1232, elapsed 0.3452 seconds.
33 queries taking 0.2827 seconds, 68 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
33 queries taking 0.2827 seconds, 68 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.