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Energy News
- EPA, DOE Announce New Steps to Strengthen ENERGY STAR March 19, 2010The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Energy today outlined a series of steps to further strengthen the trusted ENERGY STAR program. […]
- First Solar is Developing a 550-MW Solar Power Project in California March 17, 2010First Solar, Inc. is developing a 550-megawatt (MW) photovoltaic power plant in Southern California, slated for completion in 2013. The project is one of a number of large solar photovoltaic projects unfolding in California. […]
- Chevron to Build a 1-Megawatt Concentrating PV Facility in New Mexico March 17, 2010Chevron Technology Ventures will build the largest concentrating photovoltaic (PV) installation in the United States on a tailings site at a molybdenum mine in Questa, New Mexico. The 1-megawatt solar installation is considered a demonstration project. […]
- EPA, DOE Announce New Steps to Strengthen ENERGY STAR March 19, 2010
Renewable Energy
- NREL's New Robots Scrutinize Solar CellsProcess Development and Integration Laboratory is faster, more precise, gives industry quicker answers. […]
- Tool That Tracks Solar Installations is Open to AllNREL's new Open PV Web site lets users download information about installations, explore trends in photovoltaic markets. […]
- High-Speed Pipeline Revs Up Biomass AnalysisHigh throughput system can analyze enzymes, poplars, switch grass, thousands at a time to help determine which plants are best suited for biofuels. […]
- NREL's New Robots Scrutinize Solar Cells
Energy And The Environment
- EPA Issues Second Annual Ranking of U.S. Cities with the Most Energy Efficient Buildings: List shows continued growth in saving money and energy March 23, 2010WASHINGTON - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a list of U.S. metropolitan areas with the largest number of energy efficient buildings that earned EPA’s Energy Star in 2009 […]
- EPA Recognizes Leaders in Energy Efficiency March 19, 2010PHILADELPHIA (March 19, 2010) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is honoring a select group of manufacturers, retailers, public schools, hospitals, real estate companies, home builders and other organizations as 2010 Energy Star award winners […]
- EPA, DOE Announce New Steps to Strengthen Energy Star March 19, 2010WASHINGTON - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today outlined a series of steps to further strengthen the trusted Energy Star program […]
- EPA Issues Second Annual Ranking of U.S. Cities with the Most Energy Efficient Buildings: List shows continued growth in saving money and energy March 23, 2010
Energy Research
- ARRA money funds young neutrino physicist???s research March 23, 2010Alysia Marino, a particle physicist supported by DOE???s Office of High Energy Physics, always knew she???d be a scientist of some kind. […]
- Roasting biomass may be key process in bioenergy economy March 23, 2010Biorefineries may soon rely on a process akin to roasting coffee beans to get more energy-dense biomass. […]
- Researchers rediscover the structure of water March 23, 2010A team of researchers at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource, located at the DOE???s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, has found the molecular structure of water to be more complex than recently thought, suggesting that molecular models that went out of fashion decades ago may be in fact more accurate than recent ones. […]
- ARRA money funds young neutrino physicist???s research March 23, 2010
Agriculture
- Chicken House Attics Can be Tapped to Warm BroilersARS and Mississippi researchers have developed a ventilation system for broiler chicken houses that could cut producers' need for heating fuel by more than 20 percent. Click the image for more information about it. No more "foul" air from this chicken coop A breath of fresh air for pig and dairy farms Low-cost air sampler could help poul […]
- Estimating Ethanol Yields from CRP CroplandsNative tall prairie grass species such as switchgrass, big bluestem, and indiangrass are key to increasing the potential bioenergy yield from land in the Conservation Reserve Program. Photo courtesy of Scott Singer, NRCS. Protecting soils and producing biofuel with corn stover Scientists determine farm costs of producing switchgrass for ethanol Biofuel […]
- Tryptophan-enriched Diet Reduces Pig AggressionFeeding the amino acid tryptophan to young female pigs makes them less aggressive and easier to manage, according to a study by ARS scientists and cooperators. Click the image for more information about it. Breeding gentler laying hens that still produce eggs to industry standard Company or a snack? Letting pregnant sows choose Anti-stress formula give […]
- Chicken House Attics Can be Tapped to Warm Broilers
Food, Drugs And Health
- U.S. Attorney News Release: Nurse Sentenced to 30 Months in Prison for Tampering with a Consumer ProductOn March 8, 2010, Trinidad Smith, age 28 was sentenced to 30 months in prison by United States District Court Judge Joseph N. LaPlante following her plea of guilty to Tampering with a Consumer Product and Obtaining a Controlled Substance by Fraud on December 3, 2009. At the conclusion of her prison sentence, Smith will be supervised by the U.S. Probation Dep […]
- U.S. Attorney News Release: Three Indicted for Diversion of Prescription DrugsU.S. Attorney News Release: Three Indicted for Diversion of Prescription Drugs […]
- Components of Extraneous Virus Detected in Rotarix Vaccine; No Known Safety RiskFDA is recommending that healthcare practitioners temporarily suspend use of the Rotarix vaccine for rotavirus immunization in the United States while the agency learns more about components of an extraneous virus detected in the vaccine. There is no evidence at this time that this finding poses a safety risk. […]
- U.S. Attorney News Release: Springfield (Missouri) Business Owner Pleads Guilty to $17 Million Fraud Schemeinternet, dietary supplements, online, computer, […]
- FDA Warns about Increased Risk of Muscle Injury with ZocorFDA Warns about Increased Risk of Muscle Injury with Zocor - Highest approved dose of cholesterol-lowering medication could cause harm to muscles […]
- U.S. Attorney News Release: Nurse Sentenced to 30 Months in Prison for Tampering with a Consumer Product
The Spider Web: Paradox Of Super-strength
Research finds weakest chemical bonds produce materials stronger than steel
Since its development in China thousands of years ago, silk from silkworms, spiders and other insects has been used for high-end, luxury fabrics as well as for parachutes and medical sutures. Now, National Science Foundation-supported researchers are untangling some of its most closely guarded secrets, and explaining why silk is so super strong.
Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for Materials Science and Engineering say the key to silk’s pound-for-pound toughness, which exceeds that of steel, is its beta-sheet crystals, the nano-sized cross-linking domains that hold the material together.
Markus Buehler, the Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Associate Professor in MIT’s department of civil and environmental engineering, and his team recently used computer models to simulate exactly how the components of beta sheet crystals move and interact with each other. They found that an unusual arrangement of hydrogen bonds–the “glue” that stabilizes the beta-sheet crystals–play an important role in defining the strength of silk.
They found that hydrogen bonds, which are among the weakest types of chemical bonds, gain strength when confined to spaces on the order of a few nanometers in size. Once in close proximity, the hydrogen bonds work together and become extremely strong. Moreover, if a hydrogen bond breaks, there are still many hydrogen bonds left that can contribute to the material’s overall strength, due to their ability to “self-heal” the beta-sheet crystals.
The researchers conclude that silk’s strength and ductility–its ability to bend or stretch without breaking–results from this peculiar arrangement of atomic bonds. They say controlling the size of the area in which hydrogen or other chemical bonds act can lead to significantly enhanced properties for future materials, even when the initial chemical bonds are very weak.
The journal Nature Materials reported the findings online March 14.
-NSF-