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NanoTube

ACS Nanotation NanoTube gives users the opportunity to star in their own videos.  Share your thoughts about your recent papers with your colleagues.  Distribute a tutorial about nanoscience and nanotechnology.  The sky is the limit!

To add a video, first register or login.  Video categories:

My Research, Tutorials, Data Visualization, Other
"What is Nano?" Video Contest
"How will Nano Change the World?" Video Contest
  (NanoTube Video Contest Rules & Guidelines)
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How's this
Focused Ion Beam writing How's this on a head of a pin.
Added: 9 months ago, in category: Past Contest - What is Nano?, Tutorials
Uploaded by: Ugo Valbusa
Comments: 2 / Views: 471 / Avg Rating: 2.00 / Weighted Rating : 2.00
ACS_Nano_2-1807_MPI.wmv
This video pictures the highlight of a recent publication in ACS Nano 2008, 2, 1807. This work is devoted to the interaction of nanoparticles and their role in remote release of encapsulated materials. The permeability of polymeric microcapsules and temperature rise on nanoparticles are also investigated.
Added: 9 months ago, in category: My Research, Past Contest - What is Nano?
Uploaded by: Andre Skirtach
Comments: 2 / Views: 353 / Avg Rating: 3.00 / Weighted Rating : 2.86
Ferrofluid: How it works at the molecular level
Ferrofluid is an assemblage of magnetic particles engineered at the nanoscale, 100 times smaller than the wavelength visible light. Although too small to be imaged with microscopes, nano-products harness surprising properties from nanoscale physics for use in the macroscale world.
Added: 9 months ago, in category: Past Contest - What is Nano?
Uploaded by: Michael Flynn
Comments: 0 / Views: 574 / Avg Rating: 2.00 / Weighted Rating : 2.00
The Room at the Bottom
This project is a collaboration between two graduate students conducting research in nanoscience and a video artist. Several scenes were shot in silhouette in front of a projector screen displaying well-known images of nanomaterials as a backdrop. This is intended to mimic the perspective of a transmission electron microscope, a powerful instrument for imaging nanomaterials, but one that provides a 2-D perspective. The film follows a scientist's fantastical journey into a realm of nanoscale dimensions. Here popular fact and fiction of nanotechnology are explored in the style of "Alice in Wonderland."
Added: 9 months ago, in category: Past Contest - What is Nano?
Uploaded by: Loo Lin
Comments: 1 / Views: 527 / Avg Rating: 2.00 / Weighted Rating : 1.99
A journey to the nanoworld
In this video, a microscope probing on a nanoscale is filmed with another microscope during operation. We invite you to take a journey with us through the nanoworld and ultimately explore atomic structures. All movies shown here are made from original microscopy data. http://www.fz-juelich.de/video/voigtlaender
Added: 9 months ago, in category: Past Contest - What is Nano?
Uploaded by: Bert Voigtlander
Comments: 1 / Views: 831 / Avg Rating: 2.00 / Weighted Rating : 2.00
Entranced by Nanoscale Force Microscopy
Inspired by "Nanoscale magnetic resonance imaging," by C. L. Degen, M. Poggio, H. J. Mamin, C. T. Rettner, and D. Rugar, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (2009), doi: 10.1073/pnas.0812068106. This is an imaginative representation of the components and principles behind nanoscale magnetic resonance imaging. Nuclear magnetic resonance and ultrasensitive force microscopy are combined to enable a detection sensitivity of a hundred or so proton spins.
Added: 9 months ago, in category: My Research, Past Contest - What is Nano?
Uploaded by: Martino Poggio
Comments: 0 / Views: 203 / Avg Rating: 1.00 / Weighted Rating : 1.19
Atomic Quantum Dot based Quantum Cellular Automata
It has been discovered that single silicon atoms on an ordinary silicon crystal serve as "quantum dots", enabling control over single electrons and thereby enabling revolutionary computation schemes that consume miniscule power. This new control over electrons may be put to use in a number of ways. For example, the "QCA" (quantum cellular automata) mechanism proposed by Craig Lent and co-workers at Notre Dame provides an architecture for an extremely low power computer. http://www.phys.ualberta.ca/~wolkow/news.php
Added: 9 months ago, in category: Past Contest - What is Nano?
Uploaded by: Josh Mutus
Comments: 0 / Views: 163 / Avg Rating: 1.00 / Weighted Rating : 1.14
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