A startup's conductive graphene inks can be used to print RFID antennas

Thursday, August 06, 2009 | By Katherine Bourzac, MIT Technology Review

A startup company in Jessup, MD, hopes later this year to bring to market one of the first products based on the nanomaterial graphene. Vorbeck Materials is making conductive inks based on graphene that can be used to print RFID antennas and electrical contacts for flexible displays. The company, which is banking on the low cost of the graphene inks, has an agreement with the German chemical giant BASF and last month received $5.1 million in financing from private-investment firm Stoneham Partners.
Since it was first created in the lab in 2004, graphene has been hailed as a wonder material: the two-dimensional sheets of carbon atoms are the strongest material ever tested, and graphene's electrical properties make it a potential replacement for silicon in faster computer chips. Synthesizing pristine graphene of the quality needed to make transistors, though, remains a painstaking process that, as yet, can't be done on an industrial scale, though researchers areworking on this problem.
Vorbeck Materials is making what company scientific advisor Ilhan Aksay calls "defective" graphene in large quantities. Though the electrical properties of the graphene aren't good enough to support transistors, it's still strong and conductive.
Vorbeck Materials licensed their method for making "crumpled" graphene from Aksay, a professor of chemical engineering at Princeton University. Vorbeck Materials says the inks made with this crumpled graphene are conductive and cheap enough to compete with silver and carbon inks currently used in displays and RFID-tag antennas. (Another startup working on defective graphene, Graphene Energy of Austin, TX, is using a similar form of the material to make electrodes for ultracapacitors.)
Aksay's method begins by oxidizing the graphite with acids, then separating it into atom-thin sheets. The expanded graphite is then rapidly heated, creating carbon dioxide gas that builds up pressure, forcing the graphene sheets apart. This process is common, says Aksay, but his research group developed monitoring methods to improve the yield and ensure that the graphene sheets completely separate. The sheets are then heated to remove the oxygen groups. "The conductivity nears that of pristine graphene, but the sheets are crumpled so they don't stack together again," says Aksay. The resulting powder can be added to a solvent to make inks or added to polymers to make composites such as tough tire rubber.
Most conductive inks on the market are made out of silver particles. These inks can be printed using cheap techniques but the inks themselves are expensive. Silver is used instead of cheaper metals because it is less prone to oxidation. Silver inks are more conductive than Vorbeck's graphene ink, says company president John Lettow, but also much more expensive. They also have to be heat-treated after they're applied, which means they can't be printed on polymers and other heat-sensitive materials. Graphene ink requires no heat treatment and is more conductive than other carbon-based alternatives to silver inks.
Potential applications for the inks, Lettow says, include antennas for cheap RFID tags printed on paper and electrical contacts for displays. Nick Colaneri, director of the Flexible Display Center at Arizona State University, says the inks' conductivity may limit their application in displays to low-resolution devices.
Vorbeck Materials is in talks with electronics manufacturers to develop inks to their specifications. Lettow says the company will begin selling graphene inks by the end of the year.

 

posted by jochen, 20-08-2009

via MIT Technology Review


Holographische Regentropfen, die man fühlen kann, versprechen Forscher der Universität Tokio mit ihrem "Airborne Ultrasound Tactile Display". Es zeigt dreidimensionale Bilder im freien Raum, die auf der Haut spürbar sind.
Der Artikel ist zu finden unter: http://www.golem.de

posted by skarp, 07-08-2009

via www.spiegel.de



Damn amazing! Some of those companies like Telekom, Fraunhofer and Siemens should take a leaf out of his book. ;)
For this and other kitchen and houseware visit: 
http://gadgets.boingboing.net/kitchen-and-housewar/

posted by skarp, 05-08-2009

Apple Patents for tactile interface

Recent Apple patents hint at new features that could appear in future iPhones. Most interesting is a patent detailing haptic tactile feedback for iPhone — that is, the ability for users to feel the virtual keys they’re pressing on the touchscreen.

Read the whole article on http://www.wired.com

posted by skarp, 05-07-2009

Please enter ALT-Text for uploaded image.

By Fred Vogelstein | 01.09.08 | WIRED MAGAZINE: ISSUE 16.02

The demo was not going well.

Again.

It was a late morning in the fall of 2006. Almost a year earlier, Steve Jobs had tasked about 200 of Apple's top engineers with creating the iPhone. Yet here, in Apple's boardroom, it was clear that the prototype was still a disaster. It wasn't just buggy, it flat-out didn't work. The phone dropped calls constantly, the battery stopped charging before it was full, data and applications routinely became corrupted and unusable. The list of problems seemed endless. At the end of the demo, Jobs fixed the dozen or so people in the room with a level stare and said, "We don't have a product yet." The effect was even more terrifying than one of Jobs' trademark tantrums. When the Apple chief screamed at his staff, it was scary but familiar. This time, his relative calm was unnerving. "It was one of the few times at Apple when I got a chill," says someone who was in the meeting. (…)

Read all (
http://www.wired.com/gadgets/wireless/magazine/16-02/ff_iphone?currentPa...)

posted by jochen, 28-05-2009

via IxDA Discuss



Pattie Maes, Leiterin der Fluid Interface Group des MIT Media Labs zeigt in ihrem TED-Vortrag den Entwicklungsstand der nächsten Generation der Wearables.
Etwas smoother als die Oldtimer Thad Starner, Steve Mann & Co,  aber nach wie vor verbunden mit den alten Problemen des allzu technoiden Konzepts und nicht wirklich viel weiter…

 

posted by jochen, 18-05-2009

via IxDA Discuss


»NanoTouch«, entwickelt von Microsoft Research und dem Potsdamer Hasso Plattner Institute, ist ein semitransparentes See-Through-Display, bei dem sich der Touch auf der Rückseite des Devices befindet. Erscheint mir insbesondere auch deswegen interessant, weil das alte Touch-Problem, dass die Hand den Inhalt verdeckt, aufgehoben ist…

Weitere Links: http://www.hpi.uni-potsdam.de/baudisch/; http://www.patrickbaudisch.com/projects/nanotouch/index.html

posted by jochen, 15-05-2009

via cnet news

Please enter ALT-Text for uploaded image.

»Philips Design Probes is a dedicated ‘far-future’ research initiative to track trends and developments that may ultimately evolve into mainstream issues that have a significant impact on business.   The Probes generate insights from research in five main areas; politics, economic, culture, environments and technology futures.   With the aim of understanding ‘lifestyle’ post 2020, the program aims to identify probable systemic shifts in the social and economic domains likely to affect our business and create intellectual property in new areas. It challenges conventional ways of thinking to come up with concepts to stimulate debate. Deliverables range from scenarios and narratives to the creation of experience prototypes and IP fortressing.«

Website: http://www.design.philips.com/probes/whataredesignprobes/index.page
Film: http://www.design.philips.com/shared/assets/Downloadablefile/A-Creative-Force-for-Innovation-Smaller-14328.wmv

posted by jochen, 14-05-2009

»Theoretisch könnten Navigationssysteme viel mehr tun, als ihrem Besitzer den Weg zu weisen. Pkw-Hersteller arbeiten an einem lernfähigen Pfadfinder, der gleich noch den Spritverbrauch optimiert. Damit das klappt, müssen sich Autofahrer allerdings ausspähen lassen.

(...)

posted by jochen, 23-02-2009

via Spiegel Online

ERCIM News No. 76 – das online Magazin des »European Research Consortium for Informatics and mathematics« ist online mit dem Themenschwerpunkt The Sensor Web.
Wie immer aus der ausschließlich technischen Perspektive und dennoch oder gerade deswegen lesenswert…

http://ercim-news.ercim.org/

posted by jochen, 09-01-2009


Pimp Star LED Wheels…

posted by jochen, 04-01-2009