Archive for October, 2008

Future planes, cars may be made of `buckypaper’

Monday, October 20th, 2008

It’s called “buckypaper” and looks a lot like ordinary carbon paper, but don’t be fooled by the cute name or flimsy appearance. It could revolutionize the way everything from airplanes to TVs are made.

Buckypaper is 10 times lighter but potentially 500 times stronger than steel when sheets of it are stacked and pressed together to form a composite. Unlike conventional composite materials, though, it conducts electricity like copper or silicon and disperses heat like steel or brass.

“All those things are what a lot of people in nanotechnology have been working toward as sort of Holy Grails,” said Wade Adams, a scientist at Rice University.

That idea — that there is great future promise for buckypaper and other derivatives of the ultra-tiny cylinders known as carbon nanotubes — has been floated for years now. However, researchers at Florida State University say they have made important progress that may soon turn hype into reality.

Buckypaper is made from tube-shaped carbon molecules 50,000 times thinner than a human hair. Due to its unique properties, it is envisioned as a wondrous new material for light, energy-efficient aircraft and automobiles, more powerful computers, improved TV screens and many other products.

So far, buckypaper can be made at only a fraction of its potential strength, in small quantities and at a high price. The Florida State researchers are developing manufacturing techniques that soon may make it competitive with the best composite materials now available.

“If this thing goes into production, this very well could be a very, very game-changing or revolutionary technology to the aerospace business,” said Les Kramer, chief technologist for Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, which is helping fund the Florida State research.

The scientific discovery that led to buckypaper virtually came from outer space.

In 1985, British scientist Harry Kroto joined researchers at Rice University for an experiment to create the same conditions that exist in a star. They wanted to find out how stars, the source of all carbon in the universe, make the element that is a main building block of life.

Everything went as planned with one exception.

“There was an extra character that turned up totally unexpected,” recalled Kroto, now at Florida State heading a program that encourages the study of math, science and technology in public schools. “It was a discovery out of left field.”

The surprise guest was a molecule with 60 carbon atoms shaped like a soccer ball. To Kroto, it also looked like the geodesic domes promoted by Buckminster Fuller, an architect, inventor and futurist. That inspired Kroto to name the new molecule buckminsterfullerene, or “buckyballs” for short.

For their discovery of the buckyball — the third form of pure carbon to be discovered after graphite and diamonds — Kroto and his Rice colleagues, Robert Curl Jr. and Richard E. Smalley, were awarded the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1996.

Separately, Japanese physicist Sumio Iijima developed a tube-shaped variation while doing research at Arizona State University.

Researchers at Smalley’s laboratory then inadvertently found that the tubes would stick together when disbursed in a liquid suspension and filtered through a fine mesh, producing a thin film — buckypaper.

The secret of its strength is the huge surface area of each nanotube, said Ben Wang, director of Florida State’s High-Performance Materials Institute.

“If you take a gram of nanotubes, just one gram, and if you unfold every tube into a graphite sheet, you can cover about two-thirds of a football field,” Wang said.

Carbon nanotubes are already beginning to be used to strengthen tennis rackets and bicycles, but in small amounts. The epoxy resins used in those applications are 1 to 5 percent carbon nanotubes, which are added in the form of a fine powder. Buckypaper, which is a thin film rather than a powder, has a much higher nanotube content — about 50 percent.

One challenge is that the tubes clump together at odd angles, limiting their strength in buckypaper. Wang and his fellow researchers found a solution: Exposing the tubes to high magnetism causes most of them to line up in the same direction, increasing their collective strength.

Another problem is the tubes are so perfectly smooth it’s hard to hold them together with epoxy. Researchers are looking for ways to create some surface defects — but not too many — to improve bonding.

So far, the Florida State institute has been able to produce buckypaper with half the strength of the best existing composite material, known as IM7. Wang expects to close the gap quickly.

“By the end of next year we should have a buckypaper composite as strong as IM7, and it’s 35 percent lighter,” Wang said.

Buckypaper now is being made only in the laboratory, but Florida State is in the early stages of spinning out a company to make commercial buckypaper.

“These guys have actually demonstrated materials that are capable of being used on flying systems,” said Adams, director of Rice’s Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology. “Having something that you can hold in your hand is an accomplishment in nanotechnology.”

It takes upward of five years to get a new structural material certified for aviation use, so Wang said he expects buckypaper’s first uses will be for electromagnetic interference shielding and lightning-strike protection on aircraft.

Electrical circuits and even natural causes such as the sun or Northern Lights can interfere with radios and other electronic gear. Buckypaper provides up to four times the shielding specified in a recent Air Force contract proposal, Wang said.

Typically, conventional composite materials have a copper mesh added for lightning protection. Replacing copper with buckypaper would save weight and fuel.

Wang demonstrated this with a composite model plane and a stun gun. Zapping an unprotected part of the model caused sparks to fly. The electric jolt, though, passed harmlessly across another section shielded by a strip of buckypaper.

Other near-term uses would be as electrodes for fuel cells, super capacitors and batteries, Wang said. Next in line, buckypaper could be a more efficient and lighter replacement for graphite sheets used in laptop computers to dissipate heat, which is harmful to electronics.

The long-range goal is to build planes, automobiles and other things with buckypaper composites. The military also is looking at it for use in armor plating and stealth technology.

“Our plan is perhaps in the next 12 months we’ll begin maybe to have some commercial products,” Wang said. “Nanotubes obviously are no longer just lab wonders. They have real world potential. It’s real.”

Fabulous 5

Monday, October 20th, 2008

There is something about conventional leg-spinners. While a leggie might not exactly float like a butterfly, he can sting like a bee.

Australia experienced this on the third day of the second Test when Amit Mishra’s five-wicket haul capped an incisive bowling effort by India and put them in a position from where they can go for the kill in the last act. This match is following a pattern similar to the one seen in the first Test - the team batting first scoring in excess of 400 and putting the opposition under pressure.

Like India in Bangalore, Australia were feeling the heat after losing their main batsmen without much before an eighth-wicket partnership defied the odds for a while. Unlike Bangalore where India’s late resistance had reduced the difference between the teams to 70 runs, Australia’s effort couldn’t make it any less than 201.

The onus is on the hosts now to convert this difference into a significant one. Their quest for victory started on a perfect note with the openers scoring at a rate that was disconcerting for Australia.

It took India seven overs in the morning to add the big wicket of Michael Hussey to the good work they had done in the previous evening. Australia’s chances of making a match of this depended heavily on him but the left-hander got a perfect away-going delivery from Ishant Sharma that he had to play at and he only managed an edge.

It was the only reward of the day for Ishant who bowled a fiery first spell, the incoming deliveries troubling right-handers every now and then. But there was no return for India’s best bowler of the day.

On a wicket that offered nothing to the quick bowlers, Zaheer Khan kept the batsmen on their toes maintaining a tight line and length. There were no loose balls, no let up in intensity and no luck.

The spinners came into play after the first hour and it was always going to be a stern test for Australia’s lower middle-order. Both Mishra and Harbhajan invited batsmen to lunge forward or use their feet.

While Shane Watson used his height to counter this, Brad Haddin and Cameron White were found wanting on the footwork front. The former heard the timber rattle while trying to drive the off-spinner and White perished in the same manner, foxed by Mishra’s googly.

Mishra was a welcome sight. For long, India have had a leg-spinner who works on the same principles but operates in a different manner.

Anil Kumble runs in vigorously, bowls with a high-arm action and relies more on top-spinners and wrong ones than the big leg-break. Mishra eases in and gives the ball air.

He extracts greater turn and uses his secret weapon more sparingly. A five-wicket haul on debut was reward for his perseverance and of his ploy of bringing batsmen forward.

Australia lost three wickets in the first session and battled hard to stay in the match in the second, when Watson and Brett Lee put up a grim fight. The replacement for Andrew Symonds wasn’t fully convincing against the spinners, playing them awkwardly from the crease, but showed good survival strengths and a will to graft.

Blocking with bat and pad close together and trying to get behind the line of the ball, Watson was quick to pounce on the loose ones and struck them powerfully. The 77-run stand between Watson and Lee was the only one worth more than 50 in the innings and this could have a significant impact on the outcome of the match.

With Mahendra Singh Dhoni deciding against imposing the follow-on, most probably to let his bowlers loose when they are fresh again, India still had some work to do and that was to score as quickly as possible before declaring the innings closed. Hundred for no loss in 23 overs surpassed expectations and set them up nicely for the demolition mission.

Substitute of Conservatory Blinds

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

From a very long time most of us are using mostly the costly Conservatory Blinds for decreasing the heat effect in the hot summer season but the main point of concern is that they are effective to some extent but they are not much useful .Now you can solve this problem by using solar blinds in your home but these blinds are expensive than the other blinds available in the market but on other hand they are doing much better job in stopping the heat from entering the house.

These conservatory pleated binds are available in two forms as one in the form of poly carbonate roofs which is not glass. Now what is the substitute of this? One can do the best replacement with the help of pleated conservatory blinds or with the help of conservatory roof windows films. The best thing about these windows films is that, they are cheaper than the blinds and even more effective in controlling heat and harmful rays of sun from entering into the home.

There are two basic types of window films are available as one is reflective window film and the other one is coolkote window film which is available for the polycarbonate roofs and these films help to stop heat up to 81.6%.

Sachin Tendulkar — a milestone man

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

With a voracious appetite for individual records, Sachin Tendulkar is perhaps the greatest milestone-man in the history of cricket.The 35-year-old eclipsed West Indian legend Brain Lara to become the highest accumulator of runs in Test Cricket with a tally of 11,939 when he played an 88-run knock against Australia in the ongoing second Test at Mohali.

Tendulkar was only 15 when he reached his first personal landmark. The right-hander scored an unbeaten 100 for Bombay against Gujarat in the Ranji Trophy, becoming the youngest cricketer to score a century on first-class debut.

Besides, Tendulkar is the only player to score a century in his Duleep Trophy and Irani Trophy debuts.

The master batsman has played in 417 ODIs, the most number by any player and is also the highest run-getter in the shorter version of the game.He has 16,361 runs in 407 innings at an average of 44. He has scored an incredible 42 hundreds and 89 half centuries in the 50-over format, the highest by any batsman.

Tendulkar missed out on a hundred today but has scored 39 centuries in Test cricket. His 50th fifty today made him the second Indian and fourth overall to post 50 half-centuries or more in Test cricket.

Allan Border tops the chart with 63 half-century knocks, followed by Rahul Dravid (53) and Steve Waugh (50).

Tendulkar was the highest run scorer of the 1996 and 2003 Cricket World Cup.

On seven occasions, he has scored over 1000 runs in a calendar year in ODIs.

He also holds the record for most ODI runs in a year after accumulating 1894 runs in 1998 at an average of 65.

Economy stalls, but Google’s 3Q profit still rises

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

The economy is sputtering, but Google Inc.’s profits are still accelerating at a rate that suggests the Internet search leader can remain a marketing magnet even when advertisers and consumers aren’t in a spending mood.

Google provided the latest evidence of its moneymaking prowess late Thursday with the announcement of a 26 percent increase in third-quarter profits that surpassed analysts’ forecasts.

The performance drew a sigh of relief from investors, who had become convinced that Google will suffer along with just about everyone else as the U.S. economy sinks into what is widely expected to be the deepest recession in a quarter-century.

Google shares surged $36.97, or 10.5 percent, in Thursday’s extending trading after finishing the regular session at $353.02, up $13.85. It marked a dramatic change in sentiment from earlier Thursday as a cascading wave of pessimism pounded Google’s stock price to a three-year low of $309.44.

“People suddenly realized that if there a stock you are going to own through this uncertainty, (Google) is the one,” said Canaccord Adams analyst Colin Gillis.

But not even Google feels immune to the worst financial crisis to grip the world since the U.S. stock market crashed in 1929.

Things are looking grim enough to prompt Google — renowned for its free-spending ways — to hunker down and start scrimping more than it has in the past.

“This may turn out to be the quarter (Google) grew up and proved it can control expenses,” Gillis said.

Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt also offered some of his most sober commentary yet about the state of the economy. “We’re all sort of in uncharted territory,” Schmidt told analysts during a Thursday conference call.

Google nimbly navigated through the shoals in the third quarter, earning $1.35 billion, or $4.24 per share. That compared to net income of $1.07 billion, or $3.38 per share, at the same time last year.

Excluding costs for employee stock compensation, Google said it would have made $4.92 per share. That figure surpassed the average estimate of $4.75 per share among analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.

Revenue climbed 31 percent to $5.54 billion. After subtracting advertising commissions, Google’s revenue totaled $4.04 billion — about $20 million below analyst estimates.

Google executives have maintained that the company can still thrive because its technology does a better job of finding customers at a lower cost to advertisers than traditional marketing campaigns. Those factors, Google argues, means it could receive an even bigger slice of advertising budgets in a crumbling economy.

What’s more, consumers scrambling to make ends meet may be more likely to use the Internet to hunt for bargains — a quest that could increase the Google search requests that spit out ads.

Schmidt, though, acknowledged that even the Internet’s most profitable company is facing a more daunting challenge now than when the third quarter began.

“It is pretty clear the economic situation today globally is worse than people were predicting a month ago,” he said during the conference call. He and other Google executives dodged questions about how ad sales have fared as the economic outlook darkened during the past month.

Google co-founder Sergey Brin predicted the company will emerge from the turmoil even stronger. “My favorite time to manage is during a bust,” Brin said in a Thursday interview with The Associated Press. “It brings more clarity about what your customers need and what your priorities should be.”

Keeping a closer eye on expenses is a change for Google, which takes pride in spending heavily to treat its employees to free meals and expand the capacity of its data centers that run its search engine, e-mail and other products.

While Google plans to continue feeding its employees for free, the company already has shortened the operating hours of some cafes and, in some instances, is offering two entrees instead of three, Brin said. The company also is reducing the number of contractors it uses.

In another indication of a tightening budget, Google’s capital expenditures in the third quarter totaled $452 million, an 18 percent decrease from last year.

That’s the lowest amount Google has spent on capital expenditures since the fourth quarter of 2006. Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette attributed the sharp decline to the company’s fluctuating needs for additional computers, and said spending in that area could rise again.

Google clearly is managing its payroll more carefully. The company hired another 519 workers during the quarter, down from an increase of 2,130 employees at the same time last year. The company now has 20,123 employees.

Even as it curbs its costs, Google’s bank account is swelling. The company ended September with $14.4 billion in cash, up from $12.7 billion in June.

Google also is vying to become an even more dominant force on the Internet by selling ads on behalf of its slumping rival, Yahoo Inc. The alliance has been delayed by an U.S. Justice Department investigation into whether the partnership would undercut competition in the Internet advertising market. Schmidt said he hopes to resolve the fate of the Yahoo deal soon.

World’s costliest fabric brand eyes $3 mn sales in India

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Scottish fabric maker Holland & Sherry, which has ventured into the Indian high-end male apparel segment with suit lengths costing a whopping Rs.3 million ($61,662), hopes to record sales of $3 million within two years.

‘We are currently in the introductory phase of entering the Indian market. We are looking forward to partner with high-end retailers and tailors in India and once the network is well established we expect to reach a figure of $3 million (in sales) in two years.’ Holland & Sherry marketing director Malcolm Campbell told IANS in an e-mail interview.

“The annual turnover of Holland & Sherry is $72 million and is set to grow to $108 million over the next three years, with the new Indian market playing a leading role in its astonishing growth,” he added.

The Holland & Sherry collection will be retailed in India by leading textile company Digjam Ltd.

However, venturing into the Indian market was not an easy task for the brand as a lot of research went behind in studying the different cloth markets across the world.

“We had been on the lookout for business partnerships across the globe and after an in-depth study of markets in South Asia, Russia and the Middle East. It was unanimously decided that India would be best suited, given its growing economy, increasing purchasing power and its sophistication,’ Campbell maintained.

The brand has also worked out its strategy to make a major impact in the Indian market with its collection.

“Having launched our products in Delhi, we will very soon announce the launch of the Holland & Sherry brand in other metros like Mumbai and Kolkata. Our goal is to be present in every regional market in India in a time frame of three years, which would include cities like Bangalore, Chennai, Pune and Ahmedabad among others,” Campbell said.

Considering the celebrity brand endorsements in the clothing segment across the world, Holland & Sherry does not have a known face as its representative.

“We believe that Holland & Sherry does not need a brand ambassador as it enjoys a niche and loyal clientele that swear by its high-quality and exquisite range of products.

“It has, over the years, supplied some of the finest clothes to stars of the stage, television and the silver screen like Sean Connery, Johnny Depp, Nicole Kidman, Hugh Jackman, Tom Cruise and Mel Gibson,” Campbell said.

Sharing the mantra for the garment’s success over a manufacturing and distribution period spanning over 170 years, Campbell said: “The quality of our products and our customised approach has given us the reputation of becoming the ‘custom textile designers of the merchant business and this helps us expand our loyal customer base multifold.”

India, China strengthen business ties at Guangzhou trade fair

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Indian and Chinese exporters Wednesday signed a pact at a trade fair in Guangzhou, China, to promote bilateral trade cooperation.

“This (agreement) is an attempt to realise the target of $60 billion bilateral trade by 2010,” said Ajay Sahai, director general of the Federation of Indian Exports Organisations (Fieo) at the 104th China Import Export Fair in Guangzhou.

Fieo, the apex body of various export promotion councils in India, signed the agreement with the China Council for Promotion of International Trade.

Chinese companies had Oct 11 signed trade contracts worth millions of dollars with their Indian counterparts in New Delhi, which according to Chinese Vice Minister of Commerce Gao Hucheng is the first major step to close the yawning trade gap between the two countries.

Over 30 agreements worth $350 million were inked between Indian and Chinese companies.

Sahai in a statement said better wages in China and constant appreciation of its currency created an ideal condition for Indian companies to market in that country.

Fieo is taking part in the Guangzhou fair, China’s biggest business expo, with an over 70-member delegation from top India companies. Over 55,000 companies are participating in the above mega event from across the globe.

Indian companies have also received ample response especially in sectors concerning consumer goods and engineering items, said Fieo in the statement.

Fieo has also planned to set up a warehouse facility in Guangzhou in China, which will become operational shortly.

Manipur chief minister escapes assassination bid

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Manipur Chief Minister Okram Ibobi Singh escaped an assassination bid late Monday when a bomb fired by suspected militants exploded inside his official residential complex here, officials said.

A police spokesman said a bomb was fired late Monday and it exploded inside the boundary wall of the chief minister’s residence.

“The bomb landed inside the chief minister’s residential complex and damaged a private temple. Singh was present in his residence when the explosion took place,” a senior police official said requesting anonymity.

The People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK), a rebel group fighting for an independent homeland for the majority Metei community, claimed responsibility for the attack.

A PREPAK leader telephoned local newspaper offices to own up the attack.

Police and paramilitary troopers have since launched a massive combing operation in the area.

“All entry and exit routes have been sealed and efforts are being made to track down the rebels,” the official said.

The chief minister has escaped two other assassination attempts during the past four years.

There are some 19 odd militant groups active in Manipur, bordering Myanmar, with demands ranging from secession to greater autonomy.

A number of militant groups have bases in Myanmar with Manipur sharing an unfenced border with the junta ruled country.

More than 10,000 people have lost their lives to insurgency in Manipur during the past two decades.

Quantum whirlpools can help explain how Big Bang formed universe

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Discovering exactly how the Big Bang created the universe may now be a step closer - thanks to the combined efforts of physicists.

Experimental physicists from the University of Arizona worked with theoretical physicists from the University of Queensland Ashton Bradley and Matthew Davis to determine how Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) form.

A Bose-Einstein condensate is a state of matter formed at ultra-cold temperatures, where atoms behave like waves. It was first predicted by Einstein in 1924; S.N. Bose was a young Indian physicist who used the theory to explain certain behaviours of light.

Its practical implications are still not fully appreciated, but the development of ‘atom lasers’ may advance the production of nanotechnology and it may also have applications for super-powerful ‘quantum computers’.

Bradley said scientists have been able to make vortices - alignments of atoms forming rotating whirlpools within the otherwise stationary atoms of the BEC - by stirring them, said an Otago University press release.

But, until now, they had only suspected that vortices may form spontaneously under the right conditions. For years, physicists have speculated about the possibility of vortices being created as a BEC is born.

‘Many people still thought that vortices would not be formed spontaneously, because vortices are quite energetic compared to the ground state of the system.’

The Arizona-Queensland collaboration has been able to show that vortices spontaneously appear between 25 to 50 percent of the time.

‘We know that the vortices are a consequence of critical fluctuations occurring as the gas cools, becoming a superfluid Bose-Einstein condensate.’

Bradley said that, by quantifying the occurrence of vortex formation in BECs, physicists understand a little more about the behaviour of the atoms in other phase transitions, such as the emergence of structure in the universe after the Big Bang.

These findings appeared in Nature.

Nepal coffee to get a brand name

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Coffee produced in Nepal will have a brand name within two months, the country’s National Tea and Coffee Development Board (NTCDB) announced, the Himalayan Times newspaper reported Thursday.

‘The plantation and production of coffee is growing in Nepal. Also, its further growth is evident. Therefore, to cope with growing demand, it will have a brand name in the international market within two months,’ the report quoted Madhav Deep Thapaliya, administrative officer of NTCDB, as saying.

‘As new plans and policies regarding coffee production and plantation will soon be formulated by the government, we are hopeful that coffee production and its export to international markets will increase,’ he added.

Thapaliya said: ‘As soon as a policy is made regarding coffee in Nepal all the workers and the industrialists will benefit. We have completed all the processes and soon we would get our logo for coffee registered at the industry ministry.’

‘Nepali tea has its own brand in the international market since 2001 and now it’s time to get a national logo for the coffee produced in the domestic market so that it will have its own brand and won’t get mixed up with other coffee products in the international market,’ he said.

Recent statistics of NTCDB show an increase in coffee export to the international market. During 2006-07 coffee worth 401.1 million Nepali rupees (about $5.2 million) was exported. In 1994-95 it was only 164.3 million rupees ($2.1 million).

During 1994-95, coffee plantation on 135.7 hectares produced only 12.95 metric tonnes of coffee.

However in the year 2006-07, the plantation area was increased to 1,396 hectares that yielded 460 metric tonnes of coffee.

Nepal exports coffee mainly to Japan, America and European countries.