Students in the lab of NanoES faculty member and ME professor Igor Novosselov’s formed the startup AeroSpec to provide real-time air quality analysis. They recently participated in the Jones + Foster Accelerator Program, which supports students looking to grow their ideas into a new company.
Category: News
UW researchers featured in latest episode of Microsoft’s Quantum Impact series
NanoES faculty member Kai-Mei Fu, an experimental physics researcher and professor focusing on advanced quantum technologies, sat down with Dr. Krysta Svore, general manager of quantum systems and software at Microsoft, for the latest episode of Microsoft’s Quantum Impact series.
Mechanical engineering on the nanoscale
Mechanical engineering faculty in NanoES are developing new materials, systems and devices for environmental monitoring and health care.
Team uses golden ‘lollipop’ to observe elusive interference effect at the nanoscale
A team led by NanoES faculty member David Masiello and scientists from the University of Notre Dame used recent advances in electron microscopy to observe Fano interferences — a form of quantum-mechanical interference by electrons — directly in a pair of metallic nanoparticles.
Light-based ‘tractor beam’ assembles materials at the nanoscale
A team led by NanoES faculty member Peter Pauzauskie, a professor of materials science and engineering, has developed a method that could make reproducible manufacturing at the nanoscale possible. The team adapted a light-based technology employed widely in biology — known as optical traps or optical tweezers — to operate in a water-free liquid environment of carbon-rich organic solvents, thereby enabling new potential applications.
Webinar from NCI-Southwest on integrated nanophotonics
NCI-Southwest is co-hosting a webinar on “Integrated Nanophotonics: The Transition to High-Volume Manufacturing and Implications for Workforce Education” presented by Professor Robert Geer from SUNY Polytechnic on October 17 at 1 PM ET. Register!
Celebrating national nanotechnology day: A conversation with Dan Ratner
It’s National Nanotechnology Day! Celebrate by listening to our very own Dan Ratner, UW Professor of Bioengineering, on this week’s podcast from the National Nanotechnology Initiative as he talks about his passion for sharing the awesome power of nanotechnology with the next generation of scientists and engaged citizens.
NNCI image contest celebrates beauty at the nanoscale
In honor of National Nanotechnology Day on October 9th, the National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (NNCI) is hosting the Plenty of Beauty at the Bottom image contest. Referencing Richard Feynman’s 1959 lecture, “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom,” this image contest celebrates the beauty of the micro and nanoscale.
Keep up with nano research: Introducing the NanoES Newsletter
We’ve launched a new quarterly newsletter! Learn about the latest advances in nano-engineering research at UW, new programs and events, as well as updates from the Washington Nanofabrication Facility.
New metasurface design can control optical fields in three dimensions
A team led by NanoES faculty member Arka Majumdar, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and physics, has designed and tested a 3D-printed metamaterial that can manipulate light with nanoscale precision. As they report in a paper published October 4 in the journal Science Advances, their designed optical element focuses light to discrete points in a 3D helical pattern. Designing optical fields in three dimensions could enable creation of ultra-compact depth sensors for self-driving cars, as well as improved components for virtual- or augmented-reality headsets.