Nanotech Group Targets Energy Security

Getting nano–solar cells, batteries, across the "valley of death" is key














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NANO-STEP: Industry and academic groups are coming together to help bring nanotechnologies into reality. Image: ISTOCKPHOTO/ALWYNCOOPER

Lockheed Martin Corp. is joining forces with a new trade association to promote the commercialization of innovative clean-energy technologies.

The NanoAssociation for Natural Resources and Energy Security (NANRES), which launched yesterday, plans to work on developing and commercializing nano-projects that focus on alternative domestic energy sources, with the goal of strengthening the country's resource security. It has members in the defense, clean energy, nanotechnology, finance and environmental sectors.

"The nexus between national security and energy and the environment will become increasingly evident as the effects of climate change limit our access to natural resources and issues stemming from our ongoing addiction to oil and other fossil fuels exacerbate," said Erin Ross, the group's president, in a statement.

Nanotechnology involves manipulating matter at the nanoscale, down to 1/100,000 the width of a human hair. Researchers are testing ways to use nanotechnology to revolutionize energy applications, including solar panels and lithium-ion batteries that are more efficient and space-based sensors that can monitor climate change. Nanomaterials also could one day extract energy from waste heat.

Nanotechnology will be a $3.1 trillion industry by 2015, NANRES estimates, buoyed by an increased demand for technological innovation to meet pressing environmental and energy concerns. But nanotech research has struggled to advance beyond the "Valley of Death," the gap between laboratory and market, because the need to create new materials is almost always capital-intensive.

Industry and academia have responded by partnering to help commercialize technologies. For example, Lockheed Martin last year partnered with Rice University to develop new technologies for a broad range of applications in electronics, energy and security.

Reprinted from Greenwire with permission from Environment & Energy Publishing, LLC. www.eenews.net, 202-628-6500


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  1. 1. Deepwalker 04:36 PM 12/15/09

    This article is little more than an advert. Comon guys, this isnt cosmopolitan. Lets have some more facts and some more debate with some actively minded people talking about the possiblities and goals

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  2. 2. JamesDavis 08:14 AM 12/16/09

    It is good to see our intelligent people coming out of hiding from the Bush admistrations dumbed down policies. During his eight years we regressed back to the stone age. Great going sicienists, it is good to see you back.

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  3. 3. krabcat 09:25 AM 12/16/09

    this article is saying little more than "we are going to continue to do science."

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  4. 4. tharter in reply to krabcat 08:38 PM 12/17/10

    With the Congress we're about to get, there's a darn good legitimate concern that we WON'T do it. Either we do the R&D and own the technology or the Chinese will.

    Look at the history of this magazine. It has ALWAYS followed developments in technology and related business news. Did the FIRST issue of Sci-Am have a bunch of factories on the cover? I bet most of what it talked about was business related.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  5. 5. sonamsnv 07:07 AM 12/13/11

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    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
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