Saturday, May 22, 2010

New nanoscale electrical phenomenon discovered

New nanoscale electrical phenomenon discovered May 18, 2010
At the scale of the very small, physics can get peculiar. A University of Michigan biomedical engineering professor has discovered a new instance of such a nanoscale phenomenon -- one that could lead to faster, less expensive portable diagnostic devices and push back frontiers in building micro-mechanical and "lab on a chip" devices.

In our macroscale world, materials called conductors effectively transmit electricity and materials called insulators or dielectrics don't, unless they are jolted with an extremely high voltage. Under such "dielectric breakdown" circumstances, as when a bolt of lightening hits a rooftop, the dielectric (the rooftop in this example) suffers irreversible damage.

This isn't the case at the nanoscale, according to a new discovery by Alan Hunt, an associate professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering. Hunt and his research team were able to get an electric current to pass nondestructively through a sliver of glass, which isn't usually a conductor.

A paper on the research is newly published online in Nature Nanotechnology.

"This is a new, truly nanoscale physical phenomenon," Hunt said. "At larger scales, it doesn't work. You get extreme heating and damage.

"What matters is how steep the drop is across the distance of the dielectric. When you get down to the nanoscale and you make your dielectric exceedingly thin, you can achieve the breakdown with modest voltages that batteries can provide. You don't get the damage because you're at such a small scale that heat dissipates extraordinarily quickly."

These conducting nanoscale dielectric slivers are what Hunt calls liquid glass , fabricated at the U-M Center for Ultrafast Optical Science with a , which emits light pulses that are only quadrillionths of a second long.

The glass electrodes are ideal for use in lab-on-a-chip devices that integrate multiple laboratory functions onto one chip just millimeters or centimeters in size. The devices could lead to instant home tests for illnesses, food contaminants and toxic gases. But most of them need a power source to operate, and right now they rely on wires to route this power. It's often difficult for engineers to insert these wires into the tiny machines, Hunt said.
 
"The design of microfluidic devices is constrained because of the power problem," Hunt said. "But we can machine electrodes right into the device."

Instead of using wires to route electricity, Hunt's team etches channels through which ionic fluid can transmit electricity. These channels, 10 thousand times thinner than the dot of this "i," physically dead-end at their intersections with the microfluidic or nanofluidic channels in which analysis is being conducted on the lab-on a-chip (this is important to avoid contamination). But the electricity in the ionic channels can zip through the thin glass dead-end without harming the device in the process.

This discovery is the result of an accident. Two channels in an experimental nanofluidic device didn't line up properly, Hunt said, but the researchers found that electricity did pass through the device.

"We were surprised by this, as it runs counter to accepted thinking about the behavior of nonconductive materials," Hunt said. "Upon further study we were able to understand why this could happen, but only at the nanometer scale."

As for electronics applications, Hunt said that the wiring necessary in integrated circuits fundamentally limits their size.

"If you could utilize reversible dielectric breakdown to work for you instead of against you, that might significantly change things," Hunt said.

Provided by University of Michigan (news : web)

- wong chee tat :)

Global Trader Programme enhanced, commodities sector to benefit

Global Trader Programme enhanced, commodities sector to benefit
By Travis Teo | Posted: 21 May 2010 2135 hrs
 
 
Photos 1 of 1

Motorists travel over the bridge against the view of Singapore skyline.
   
 


 
SINGAPORE : Singapore has enhanced its Global Trader Programme (GTP) to boost the commodities trading sector.

With the improvement, structured commodity financing activities will qualify for tax concessions.

Enterprise agency IE Singapore said that structured commodity financing is the latest value-added activity to be included in its GTP.

It will be an area that can enable better credit and performance risk management for the commodities sector.

The move is part of efforts to build up Singapore's trading environment to remain competitive as Asia becomes the centre of the world's trade flow.

The GTP, which was launched in June 2001, is aimed at encouraging companies to use Singapore as their global or regional trading base.

Total revenue for companies under the GTP grew at a compounded annual growth rate of 14 per cent over the last five years to US$465 billion.

However, the total revenue of US$465 billion recorded last year was 30 per cent lower from that of 2008.

IE Singapore added that 35 new entrants also joined the GTP this year while another 37 renewed their (GTP) status for the next five years.

New entrants this year includes South African, Russian, Japanese as well as Singapore companies.

Trade and Industry Minister Lim Hng Kiang said; "We expect this GTP enhancement to contribute to higher trade volumes and strengthen Singapore's position as an international trading hub.

"This enhancement will also lay the foundation to build intellectual capital in structured financing within commodity houses in Singapore." 


- CNA/ms 

- wong chee tat :)

Younger Singaporeans biggest debt defaulters

Younger Singaporeans biggest debt defaulters
By Mustafa Shafawi | Posted: 20 May 2010 1308 hrs
 
 
Photos 1 of 1

Singapore youths (file picture)
   
 


 
SINGAPORE: Younger Singaporeans are increasingly defaulting on their debts.

Figures released by DP Credit Bureau showed that the percentage of default records of 21 to 29 year olds rose from five per cent (5.07%) in January 2009 to seven per cent (7.16%) in December 2009.

They're the age group with the highest number of defaults.

The figures also show 21 to 29 years that are married have higher rates of default on debts than their single counterparts - a phenomenon unique to this age bracket.

For all other groups, married individuals have a lower rate of default than singles of the same age.

The rate of bad debts of Singaporeans between 21 and 29 years old is more than double (130%) than the average rate for all consumers at 3 per cent (3.11%).

Managing Director of DP Credit Bureau, Chen Yew Nah, said young married Singaporeans need to reassess their spending plans and set themselves more realistic budgets that they can stick to.

She said they also need to be more diligent in making repayments on time.

This is the age when young Singaporeans graduate and enter the workforce, so it the first time they have access to credit.

They may not be experienced at managing their debts and their personal budgets.

Ms Chen said this lack of discipline will hurt them in the long run as it ends up affecting their credit rating and their ability to access credit in the future." 

- CNA/jy

- wong chee tat :)