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News
Headwaters NanoKinetix Announces Nano-Scientist to
Break Through Impasse in Flat-Screened TV Technology (4/10/2005)
Headwaters NanoKinetix announced today the
development of a technology that may allow for the production of
flat-screen televisions that are higher-quality yet less expensive
than ones currently on the market. Until now, the technology underpinning
the fashionably slim monitors has limited both their size and life
expectancy.
Dr. Bing Zhou, a pioneering molecular scientist
at NanoKinetix, a research lab in Lawrenceville, New Jersey has
developed a process that has the potential to overcome the limitations
of the two predominant ways to make flat-screen monitors -- liquid-crystal-display
(LCD) and plasma Digital Light Processing (DLP(TM)). An LCD monitor
delivers high-quality pictures, but requires liquid crystals which
are "grown" using an expensive and time-consuming process. The relatively
high probability of imperfections in large crystal clusters limits
the dimensions of LCD TVs to no bigger than 35 to 40 inches. Plasma
monitors deliver bright colors and clarity without size limitations,
but at the cost of expensive materials and a usable product life
between 4 and 5 years. After that, picture quality begins to deteriorate
and fade.
Polymeric crystals -- synthesized by a chemical
process based on nanotechnology -- can overcome both the high costs
and inherent imperfections of current technology, but until now
no one has been able to jump the hurdles to making them. The answer
lies in Dr. Zhou's unique and patented method of nanoparticle control
for an even and cost-effective application of a super-thin coating
of highly conductive metallic material, such as copper, palladium,
or platinum, perhaps as thin as a single molecule, to the surface
of polymers to form a radically new kind of light-emitting diode.
Nanotechnology will enable the production of high-quality, long-life,
flat-screen television monitors at a fraction of the cost of today's
devices. While these new metal-coated screens will still have a
finite life-span, they will last much longer, and will deliver brighter
and clearer pictures, than the best of today's LCDs and DLPs.
And that's just the beginning. One day Dr.
Zhou's nanomaterials may make flat-screens that last twice as long
as today's plasma TVs, cost half as much, and, with organic light-emitting
diodes (OLEDs), have none of the trace metals that can deteriorate
picture quality over time. Dr. Zhou thinks "outside the box" and
envisions a day when nanotechnology will enable manufacturers to
produce truly cutting-edge flat TV devices-- millimeter-thin screens
in any size to fit any room, able to be rolled up for convenient
transport.
www.htigrp.com
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