The SODIS is a method by which solar energy is utilized to remove bacteria and purify water.
A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) has been signed between QinetiQ and the King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST) in Saudi Arabia to collaborate on a range of research and technology development programmes which could include autonomy, robotics, sensors, communications and remote sensing.
Mobile ice sensors are being used to help tackle the effects of severe cold on the Scottish road network.
Fingerprint Cards (FPC) and Semiconductor Manufacturing International (SMIC) have issued a joint statement that they will together introduce the FPC1080A, a fingerprint swipe sensor, ideal for mobile phones and tablets, in the Chinese markets.
MIT researchers, working with the Cardiovascular Research Center at the Massachusetts General Hospital have created a miniature implant that will trace signs in the bloodstream of patients who are unable to detect symptoms of minor heart attacks.
Wakana Kubo and Shigenori Fujikawa from the RIKEN Innovation Center, Wako, and the Japan Science and Technology Agency, have developed a nanostructure that will support plasmons across wide areas.
Electro-Chemical Devices has launched the AC10 Air Blast Spray Cleaner minimizing the need for manual cleaning of sensors, thus reducing a technician’s work hours and costs of treatment of water and wastewater.
Drs. Joshua Caldwell and Orest Glembocki, scientists at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Electronic Science and Technology Division, working closely with a team of researchers, have developed a sensor that will detect fingerprints of threat agents at the tracing level.
Early detection and identification of trace level chemical and biological agents and explosive compounds are critical to rapid reaction, response, and survivability in asymmetric warfare. While there are many methods currently being used that can detect these threats, none allow for the unique fingerprinting of threat agents at trace levels.
A low-cost, highly-sensitive biological and chemical sensor to detect changes in the pH level of an environment has been developed by Cagri Savran, a study leader and an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University, along with Babak Ziaie, a Purdue University professor of electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering and a team of researchers.
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