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Carbon Nanotubes

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Uploaded by on Oct 17, 2006

Julie MacPherson talks about her work with Carbon Nanotubes and Atomic Force Microscopy

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Howto & Style

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Uploader Comments (WarwickICAST)

  • I love this field of knowledge and would love to work in but I'm still in the 1sf year of Biomedical Engineering.

    What can I do to get in this field as fast as I can. I want to work on this!

  • You might like to have a listen to a podcast we did with Professor David Smith from York Uni on nanotech in medicine - check out Warwick Podcasts on the University of Warwick website. Worth a listen if you want to see about working with nano science in biomedicine.

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  • I <3 fullerenes.

  • It's the new age Asbestos

  • they say thies NANOTUBES will give us the ability to make ropes from the suface to space. nomore rockets.

  • "the n00b generation of electronic devices?"

  • i get it.

  • Agree with Cyxgun. The jets I worked on in the USMC were made of special carbon fiber composites. Makes for a much lighter aircraft that is strong as steal! Climbing around on them, we would often get tiny carbon slivers in our skin. Felt itchy like fiberglass insulation, but to make it worse; your body doesn't reject carbon. So, the sliver either stays in you or works it way through to the other side. With that in mind, I think that touching or breathing carbon nanotubes would be a bad idea!

  • LMAO

  • This stuff is supposed to be like asbestos if you breath it in though. Worse, actually since it's so tiny it can pass through even the finest air filters as if they weren't there.

  • ultra high frequency sonication is one of the methods used to disperse them. But again, it all depends on the type of matrix material being used. ;)

  • Can anybody advise me How to disperse them

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