Stretching the limits on conducting wires
2015-07-23
(Press-News.org) This news release is available in Japanese.
In the race to produce highly stretchable conductors, researchers have developed a new technique that aligns sheets of layered carbon nanotubes along stretched rubber cores, creating an extremely flexible conductive fiber. From pacemaker leads to flexible displays and batteries, there is a growing need for fibers that don't lose their conductivity upon repeated stretching, twisting or flexing. The challenge has been to create a conductive material that is highly elastic, but that maintains a high level of conductivity when distorted - which is often not the case for existing materials that use variations of nanofibers, graphene, fiber and rubber. Liu and colleagues dramatically improve upon these other materials by stretching rubber fiber cores to roughly 1400%, and then aligning a sheath of carbon nanotubes in parallel to the strained core. Upon relaxation of the core, the nanotube sheath will buckle but will not break. This technique offers an impressive stretch-to-conductivity ratio, where there is less than a 5% decrease in electrical conductivity when the material is stretched by 1000%. The team has already taken this technique one step further by creating a more complicated combination of materials that uses a second layer of rubber. This allows for a high degree of twist within the combined materials, which could be used to control movement in artificial muscles. By creating significantly more efficient materials, this research could have a substantial impact on future medical devices, optical elements, and robotics. A Perspective by Tushar Ghosh provides more insights about this new technique.
INFORMATION:
Article #11: "Hierarchically buckled sheath-core fibers for superelastic electronics, sensors, and muscles," by Z. Liu; S. Fang; F.A. Moura; N. Jiang; J. Di; X. Lepró; C.S. Haines; R. Zhang; X. Wang; M.D. Lima; D. Qian; H. Lu; R.H. Baughman at University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson, TX; Z. Liu; J. Ding; N. Yuan; R. Wang; W. Lv; C. Dong; M. Chen; Q. Yin at Changzhou University in Changzhou, China; Z. Liu; S. Fang; N. Jiang; N. Yuan; S. Yin; D.W. Lee; R. Wang; H. Wang; W. Lv; C. Dong; R. Zhang; M. Chen; Q. Yin; Y. Chong; R.H. Baughman at Jiangnan Graphene Research Institute in Changzhou, China; F.A. Moura; D.S. Galvão at State University of Campinas in Campinas, Brazil; M. Zhang at Florida State University in Tallahassee, FL; S. Yin; H. Wang; R. Zhang at Tianjin University of Technology in Tianjin, China; R. Zhang at Northwestern Polytechnical University in Xi'an, China; R. Ovalle-Robles at Lintec of America, Nano-Science and Technology Center in Richardson, TX; J. Ding at Jiangsu University in Zhenjiang, China.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-07-23
Scientists have identified a critical function of what they believe to be schizophrenia's "Rosetta Stone" gene that could hold the key to decoding the function of all genes involved in the disease.
The breakthrough has revealed a vulnerable period in the early stages of the brain's development that researchers hope can be targeted for future efforts in reversing schizophrenia.
In a paper published today in the journal Science, neuroscientists from Cardiff University describe having uncovered the previously unknown influence of a gene in ensuring healthy brain development.
The ...
2015-07-23
COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Do you have gender "faultlines" in your organization? New research suggests that such fissures appear when gender differences solidify into cliques. And this tends to occur when members of one gender share other demographic traits and professional interests, such as age, job responsibilities and time served. For example, the men in one organization might be young techies, while the women might tend to be middle-aged marketers. Or vice versa. What's important is that several qualities align in addition to gender, creating a stronger sense of in-group ...
2015-07-23
ANN ARBOR--A new University of Michigan study finds that teens using marijuana for medical reasons are 10 times more likely to say they are hooked on marijuana than youth who get marijuana illegally.
The study is the first to report on a nationally representative sample of 4,394 high school seniors and their legal or illegal medical marijuana use as it relates to other drug use. In the study, 48 teens had medical marijuana cards, but 266 teens used medical marijuana without a card.
Carol Boyd, the study's lead author and professor at the U-M School of Nursing, said ...
2015-07-23
MADISON, Wis. -- University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers have developed a new approach to structuring the catalysts used in essential reactions in the chemical and energy fields. The advance offers a pathway for industries to wean themselves off of platinum, one of the scarcest metals in the earth's crust.
In an effort to reduce the catalysis world's dependence on this highly reactive and versatile -- but also quite expensive -- metal, UW-Madison chemical engineering Professor Manos Mavrikakis and his collaborators have turned to the nanoscale structure of particles, ...
2015-07-23
MADISON, Wis. -- If you have two working eyes, you are live streaming two images of the world into your brain. Your brain combines the two to produce a view of the world that appears as though you had a single eye -- like the Cyclops from Greek mythology.
And that's a good thing, as the combination of the two images makes for a much more useful impression of the world. With one eye shut, catching a ball or parking a car become far more difficult.
"If you're reaching out with your hand, you want to aim not at where things appear to be, but where they are," says Bas Rokers, ...
2015-07-23
Everybody grieves the death of a loved one, and the process helps most mourners adjust to their loss.
"Charlie Brown was right," said Christopher Layne, a psychologist and researcher at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA. "There is good grief."
But for some people, bereavement becomes a problem in itself, prolonging suffering and impairing functioning. For grieving children and adolescents persistent complex bereavement disorder can derail social and academic development at a time when children and adolescents need to master skills and form ...
2015-07-23
PULLMAN, Wash.--Washington State University scientists have found that glyphosate, the main ingredient in the herbicide Roundup, does not accumulate in mother's breast milk.
Michelle McGuire, an associate professor in the WSU School of Biological Sciences, is the lead researcher of the study, the first to have its results independently verified by an accredited, outside organization.
Her findings, presented at the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology Conference on July 23 in Big Sky, Mont., show that glyphosate, the most used weed-killing chemical ...
2015-07-23
Sometimes consumers might appreciate a pop-up ad that reflects the merchandise they were recently browsing online, and sometimes they just might decide to spike it and thereafter avoid the seller that placed the ad. Retailers can learn about this behavior in the September 2015 issue of the Journal of Retailing.
In "The Importance of Trust for Personalized Online Advertising," Marketing Professors Alexander Bleier, of Boston College's Carroll School of Management, and Maik Eisenbeiss, of the University of Bremen, show how trust in a particular vendor affects the degree ...
2015-07-23
When Tropical Depression 12W formed on the northeastern tip of the Philippines in the Luzon Region, NASA's Aqua satellite captured infrared data on the newborn storm.
The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument that flies aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured infrared data on Tropical Depression 12W. AIRS data showed some cloud top temperatures were as cold as -63F/-53C on July 23 at 5:17 UTC (1:17 a.m. EDT). Cloud top temperatures that cold have been shown to generate heavy rainfall.
Tropical Depression 12W (TD12W) formed at 0900 UTC (5 a.m. EDT) on July 23 ...
2015-07-23
Fairfax, Va., July 22, 2015 - The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) is concerned about proposed additional payment cuts to radiation therapy detailed in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' (CMS) proposed Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS), released July 8, 2015, which will take effect on January 1, 2016. Freestanding centers estimate that the combined impact of the Medicare proposals would result in a five to seven percent reduction in payment for radiation oncology services at community-based centers, although the cuts will vary and could ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Stretching the limits on conducting wires