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By Michael Kanellos
Posted on ZDNet News: Oct 21, 2004 5:22:00 PM

Nanotechnology specialist QuantumSphere has developed technology that eventually could help heat homes--or blow them up.

The San Diego-based start-up has created a manufacturing process for producing small, stable metallic particles that consist of only a few atoms. By reducing the number of atoms per particle, manufacturers can better exploit the inherent properties of these elements in chemical reactions.

News.context

What's new:
Start-up QuantumSphere devises a manufacturing process designed to help get nanometals into more products.

Bottom line:
Nanotech versions of aluminum and nickel point the way to faster rockets, better bombs and cheaper fuel cells. But QuantumSphere is heading into a tough marketplace.

More stories on this topic

With aluminum, that means more powerful explosions. Munitions makers will likely be able to create aerial bombs that are smaller and lighter, but more powerful than current weapons. A rocket with nanoaluminum-enhanced fuel will reach a target velocity faster.

"It will accelerate to Mach 8 because of the higher burn rate," said Douglas Carpenter, chief scientific officer and co-founder of QuantumSphere. "If you can shoot someone down before they can shoot you, that is good."

By contrast, nanonickel could be used to replace platinum and other fairly expensive elements in catalytic converters and fuel cells. This shift could lead to cheaper hydrogen fuel cells for homes and cars in the growing alternative-energy market. Some Japanese manufacturers will come out with hydrogen fuel systems for homes in the first quarter of next year. Both metals can also be used in new types of coatings.

"Nickel is pretty much a garden-variety material," said QuantumSphere CEO Kevin Maloney. "It is a direct replacement for platinum."

NASA, the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Navy and Ballard Power Systems, among others, are already customers.

As space-age as it sounds, nanotechnology--the science of making products out of components or molecules that measure less than 100 nanometers (a nanometer is a billionth of a meter)--has begun to sneak into the general market. Pants, bicycle components and car parts sprinkled with specialized nanoparticles have already, or soon will, come out. Socks with silver nanoparticles aim to prevent foot odor by killing bacteria.

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Reference?
Have you got a reference? (Read the rest)
Posted by: Matt Heffron Posted on: 10/20/05 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
Nanotech is SO 20th century...  Jack-Booted EULA | 10/21/04
By the way (OT)  Jack-Booted EULA | 10/21/04
Antimatter?  CobraA1 | 10/22/04
Both posts were pathetic attempts at humor...  Jack-Booted EULA | 10/22/04
Nickel metal...  Bill4 | 10/21/04
So is air... (nt)  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/04
Well If Lemon Juice Replaces  ParadigmOdyssey | 10/21/04
Not Really  Roger Ramjet | 10/22/04
Plus, hydrogen if leaked in enough quantity...  boomslang_z | 10/22/04
Uhm, not really  Jkirk3279 | 10/24/04
That Just Pawns Off  ParadigmOdyssey | 10/23/04
Is it too early to start picking up cans again?  Squawkbox | 10/21/04
New fuels  Roger Ramjet | 10/22/04
Alternative fuels...  Bill4 | 10/22/04
Those wacky amorphous solar cells...  boomslang_z | 10/22/04
deserts  dwest_z | 10/22/04
LOL  Bill4 | 10/22/04
Hydrogen from alcohol  Jkirk3279 | 10/24/04
sounds about right..  NemesisNL | 10/22/04
Not Quite true . . .  Roger Ramjet | 10/22/04
Smaller in size...  mr_saxman | 10/22/04
Yes, I get it...  boomslang_z | 10/22/04
Nanotech drawbacks need to be explored...  boomslang_z | 10/22/04
Come current  mythoughts_z | 10/22/04
Reference?  Matt Heffron | 10/20/05

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