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New Nanostructured Materials Featured in Nature Materials
TROY, N.Y. — Research on a new class of nanostructured
materials used to reduce vibrations in mechanical equipment and
electronic devices, being developed by a team of scientists at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, will be featured in
Nature Materials.
“The nanoscale building blocks we have developed have both
micro and macro applications,” said Nikhil Koratkar, assistant
professor of mechanical, aerospace, and nuclear engineering at
Rensselaer. “The new systems reduce and control vibrations
within structures and will benefit the performance, safety, and
reliability of future manufacturing equipment, sensitive
laboratory equipment, and everyday electronic devices.”
The Rensselaer research team, led by Koratkar, added carbon
nanotube fillers to traditional vibration reduction materials
to enhance their energy dissipation capability. Adding large
quantities of nanoscale fillers increases the amount of surface
area, and thereby increases frictional sliding that occurs at
the filler-to-filler interface. The result is a decrease in
vibrations.
In 2004, Koratkar received a National Science Foundation
(NSF) Faculty Early Career Development Award (CAREER) to fund
the development of these new materials. Additional Rensselaer
researchers on the project include Pulickel Ajayan, professor
of materials science and engineering; Pawel Keblinksi,
associate professor of materials science and engineering; and
Jonghwan Suhr, a doctoral student in mechanical, aerospace, and
nuclear engineering.
The research is available in the Nature Materials
journal online, and will be published in an upcoming print
edition of the journal.
About Nature Materials
Nature Materials is a monthly
multidisciplinary journal aimed at bringing together
cutting-edge research across the entire spectrum of materials
science and engineering. The journal offers an engaging,
informative, and accessible product including papers of
exceptional significance and quality in a discipline that
promises to have great influence on the development of society
in years to come.
See also
NSF Press Release.
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Published
January 10,
2005 |
Contact: Mary Cimo
Phone: (518) 687-7174
E-mail: cimom@rpi.edu |
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