Showing posts with label break-through. Show all posts
Showing posts with label break-through. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 January 2014

HTC One M8 Release In March? New Case Design Leaked Early

HTC One M8 Release In March? New Case Design Leaked Early

htc one m8, htc one, htc one two, htc two
The HTC One M8 (or HTC One Two or HTC Two) release is predicted to be announced next month at the Mobile World Congress event. Many believe the successor to the HTC One phone is coming by March.
Rumors concerning the HTC One M8, the top secret sounding design name for the next generation HTC phone, have been swirling since some of the specs for the new phone were leaked in November. The HTC One M8 is expected to feature a much upgraded camera. While many consumers loved the feel and design of the android run HTC One, they were largely disappointed in the weak camera.
Fans of the HTC One have nothing to fear with the new model. It is expected to reveal a 1440 x 2560 pixel (QHC) resolution display. The new case design that has been leaked to multiple media outlets also shows a second cutout for what appears to either be a secondary eyesight for a camera or a space for index finger print scanning. There are a number of questions regarding that second hole. It is very possible the HTC One M8 will feature twin UltraPixel cameras to improve autofocus, image quality, and depth of focus.
Also expected to be announced in February for the March release is a five inch screen. The larger display (probably not wraparound in case you were wondering) will have a 1080 HD display. But more than aesthetic upgrades are coming with the HTC One M8. Anchored by the Qualcomm snapdragon processor, possibly 3 GB of RAM, and running KitKat, the HTC One M8 is sure to be back in the mix for best handset.

Friday, 24 January 2014

Surprise Discovery Could Revolutionize Solar Energy

Surprise Discovery Could Revolutionize Solar Energy


Researchers Discover Material that Could Revolutionize Solar Energy
This is the experimental setup used to generate femtosecond laser pulses which serve as an ultrafast “flash ” for the camera so that very rapid phenomenon can be filmed. Credit: Simon Gelinas
In a newly published study, researchers from Cambridge’s Cavendish Laboratory detail the surprise discovery that could revolutionize solar energy.
Researchers have been able to tune ‘coherence’ in organic nanostructures due to the surprise discovery of wavelike electrons in organic materials, revealing the key to generating “long-lived charges” in organic solar cells – material that could revolutionize solar energy.
By using an ultrafast camera, scientists say they have observed the very first instants following the absorption of light into artificial yet organic nanostructures and found that charges not only formed rapidly but also separated very quickly over long distances – phenomena that occur due to the wavelike nature of electrons which are governed by fundamental laws of quantum mechanics.
This result surprised scientists as such phenomena were believed to be limited to “perfect” – and expensive – inorganic structures; rather than the soft, flexible organic material believed by many to be the key to cheap, ‘roll-to-roll’ solar cells that could be printed at room temperatures – a very different world from the traditional but costly processing of current silicon technologies.
The study,sheds new light on the mystery mechanism that allows positive and negative charges to be separated efficiently – a critical question that continues to puzzle scientists – and takes researchers a step closer to effectively mimicking the highly efficient ability to harvest sunlight and convert into energy, namely photosynthesis, which the natural world evolved over the course of millennia.
“This is a very surprising result. Such quantum phenomena are usually confined to perfect crystals of inorganic semiconductors, and one does not expect to see such effects in organic molecules – which are very disordered and tend to resemble a plate of cooked spaghetti rather than a crystal,” said Dr Simon Gélinas, from Cambridge’s Cavendish Laboratory, who led the research with colleagues from Cambridge as well as the University of California in Santa Barbara.
During the first few femtoseconds (one millionth of one billionth of a second) each charge spreads itself over multiple molecules rather than being localized to a single one. This phenomenon, known as spatial coherence, allows a charge to travel very quickly over several nanometers and escape from its oppositely charged partner – an initial step which seems to be the key to generating long-lived charges, say the researchers. This can then be used to generate electricity or for chemical reactions.
By carefully engineering the way molecules pack together, the team found that it was possible to tune the spatial coherence and to amplify – or reduce – this long-range separation. “Perhaps most importantly the results suggest that because the process is so fast it is also energy efficient, which could result in more energy out of the solar cell,” said Dr Akshay Rao, a co-author on the study from the Cavendish Laboratory.
Dr Alex Chin, who led the theoretical part of the project, added that, if you look beyond the implications of the study for organic solar cells, this is a clear demonstration of “how fundamental quantum-mechanical processes, such as coherence, play a crucial role in disordered organic and biological systems and can be harnessed in new quantum technologies”.
The work at Cambridge forms part of a broader initiative to harness high tech knowledge in the physics sciences to tackle global challenges such as climate change and renewable energy. This initiative is backed by both the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and the Cambridge Winton Program for the Physics of Sustainability. The work at the University of California in Santa Barbara was supported by the Center for Energy Efficient Materials, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award #DC0001009.
Publication: Simon Gélinas, et al., “Ultrafast Long-Range Charge Separation in Organic Semiconductor Photovoltaic Diodes,” Science, 2013; DOI: 10.1126/science.1246249
Source: University of Cambridge
Image: Simon Gelinas

Engineers Convert Yeast Cells into Biofuel

Engineers Convert Yeast Cells into Biofuel


Engineers Convert Yeast Cells into Biofuel
Left: Starting cells with around 15 percent lipid content. Right: Engineered cells with nearly 90 percent lipid content.
Using genetically engineered yeast cells and ordinary table sugar, engineers from the Cockrell School of Engineering developed a new biofuel.

Austin, Texas — Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin’s Cockrell School of Engineering have developed a new source of renewable energy, a biofuel, from genetically engineered yeast cells and ordinary table sugar. This yeast produces oils and fats, known as lipids, that can be used in place of petroleum-derived products.
Assistant professor Hal Alper, in the Cockrell School’s McKetta Department of Chemical Engineering, along with his team of students, created the new cell-based platform. Given that the yeast cells grow on sugars, Alper calls the biofuel produced by this process “a renewable version of sweet crude.”
The researchers’ platform produces the highest concentration of oils and fats reported through fermentation, the process of culturing cells to convert sugar into products such as alcohol, gases or acids.
The UT Austin research team was able to rewire yeast cells to enable up to 90 percent of the cell mass to become lipids, which can then be used to produce biodiesel.
“To put this in perspective, this lipid value is approaching the concentration seen in many industrial biochemical processes,” Alper said. “You can take the lipids formed and theoretically use it to power a car.”
Since fatty materials are building blocks for many household products, this process could be used to produce a variety of items made with petroleum or oils — from nylon to nutrition supplements to fuels. Biofuels and chemicals produced from living organisms represent a promising portion of the renewable energy market. Overall, the global biofuels market is expected to double during the next several years, going from $82.7 billion in 2011 to $185.3 billion in 2021.
“We took a starting yeast strain of Yarrowia lipolytica, and we’ve been able to convert it into a factory for oil directly from sugar,” Alper said. “This work opens up a new platform for a renewable energy and chemical source.”
The biofuel the researchers formulated is similar in composition to biodiesel made from soybean oil. The advantages of using the yeast cells to produce commercial-grade biodiesel are that yeast cells can be grown anywhere, do not compete with land resources and are easier to genetically alter than other sources of biofuel.
“By genetically rewiring Yarrowia lipolytica, Dr. Alper and his research group have created a near-commercial biocatalyst that produces high levels of bio-oils during carbohydrate fermentation,” said Lonnie O. Ingram, director of the Florida Center for Renewable Chemicals and Fuels at the University of Florida. “This is a remarkable demonstration of the power of metabolic engineering.”
So far, high-level production of biofuels and renewable oils has been an elusive goal, but the researchers believe that industry-scale production is possible with their platform.
In a large-scale engineering effort spanning over four years, the researchers genetically modified Yarrowia lipolytica by both removing and overexpressing specific genes that influence lipid production. In addition, the team identified optimum culturing conditions that differ from standard conditions. Traditional methods rely on nitrogen starvation to trick yeast cells into storing fat and materials. Alper’s research provides a mechanism for growing lipids without nitrogen starvation. The research has resulted in a technology for which UT Austin has applied for a patent.
“Our cells do not require that starvation,” Alper said. “That makes it extremely attractive from an industry production standpoint.”
The team increased lipid levels by nearly 60-fold from the starting point.
At 90 percent lipid levels, the platform produces the highest levels of lipid content created so far using a genetically engineered yeast cell. To compare, other yeast-based platforms yield lipid content in the 50 to 80 percent range. However, these alternative platforms do not always produce lipids directly from sugar as the UT Austin technology does.
Alper and his team are continuing to find ways to further enhance the lipid production levels and develop new products using this engineered yeast.
This research was funded by the Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Program, the DuPont Young Professor Grant and the Welch Foundation under grant F-1753.
Publication: John Blazeck, et al., “Harnessing Yarrowia lipolytica lipogenesis to create a platform for lipid and biofuel production,” Nature Communications 5, Article number: 3131; doi:10.1038/ncomms4131
Source: University of Texas at Austin’s Cockrell School of Engineering
Image: University of Texas at Austin’s Cockrell School of Engineering