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NAC 2007 Releases


NAC NanoTx'07 Conference

The Nanomaterials Application Center at Texas State University-San Marcos was actively engaged in the NanoTx'07 conference. On Tuesday, October 2, 2007, Walt Trybula, NAC Director, taught a short course entitled: Nanotechnology Business 101. A "PDF" file of the presentation is available for download af www.tryb.org/NanoBusiness101.pdf.

Dr. Trybula also presented a paper entitled: "The Coming Challenges in Electronics" on Wednesday afternoon, October 3, 2007. The focus of this presentation was to provide examples of areas where the properties of materials start to impact the behaviour of the resultant devices. A "PDF" file of this presentation is available for download at www.tryb.org/ComingChallenges.pdf.


NAC Director speaks at U.S. Congressional Nanotech Caucus

Walt Trybula, NAC Director, presented "Nanotechnology: Electronics and Photonics" to U.S. Congressional staffers at the Nanotech Caucus on September 10, 2007. The presentation focuses on the migration from semicondustor based technology to tomorrow's nano base one, with the accompanying manufacturing challenges. The presentation was followed by an open question and answer session. Presentation slides are available at www.nanotxstate.org/nanotechnology070910.ppt. The file size is amonst 8MB.[September 2007]


Vist by Shimane (Japan) Delegation to Central Texas

Eleven representatives from Shimane Prefecture (Japan) visited Central Texas. The meetings were focued on continued collaboration. Highlights of the visit were discussions of continued efforts in solar cells and the applicaiton of the Texas State University CBDO material. Additional disucssions were held on a unique approach to security issues on Internet communciations. This meeting is a continuing relationship that was initiated in 2003. [September 2007]


NAC Novel Material Employed to Protect Marines

Texas State University -San Marcos researchers, Professors Gary Beall and Chad Booth, have had their material incorporated into the transparent armor on Marine helicpoters. The material is strronger and lighter than existing materials. An advertisement for the material recently appeared in the Texas Monthly magazine. Contact the researchers or NAC for additional details. [January 2007]


NAC Director elevated to SPIE Fellow

Walt Trybula, Ph.D., was made a Fellow of the SPIE Society at the recent SPIE Advanced Lithography Conference for his contributions to the advancement of lithography. Walt is the Director of the Nanomaterials Applicaiton Center, which is focused on accelerating the commercializaiton of nanotechnology. [February 2007]



NAC 2006 Releases


NAC Director announced

Texas State University-San Marcos and the Board of Directors for the Nanomaterials Application Center (NAC) have announced the appointment of Dr. Walt Trybula as the Director of the Nanomaterials Application Center.  He n brings leading edge technology experience and is well known as a strong proponent of nano technology.  Dr. Trybula is an IEEE Fellow and an IEEE Distinguished Lecturer.  He brings 13 years of experience at SEMATECH and also 12 years with General Electric, nine of those years were on corporate staff advising the on implementation of electronics.  Dr. Trybula has been with a number of startups.  He is also a Director of The Trybula Foundation, Inc.

 

The Nanomaterials Application Center at Texas State is the focal point to coordinate, facilitate, and expedite nanoscience and nanoengineering developments to drive commercialization of innovation that benefits society.  The Members of the Center consist of academic institutions, research organizations, and for-profit corporations. The research efforts focus on all forms of nanotechnology with efforts ranging from the fundamental understanding of the unique characteristics of the nano particles to applications that incorporate and leverage their unique properties.

 

The applications range from med-bio products that will foster advances in health care diagnosis and treatment through materials applications, which have already provided increased strength through incorporation of nanoparticles.  Nanoelectronics include the development of novel transistors and quantum dots through the application of MEMS/NEMS to solve sensory challenges.  As power consumption becomes more of an issue, the application of nanotube cells provides an opportunity to mitigate the issues.  There are currently 12 organizations participating in the Center.

 

PRESS RELEASE

FOR RELEASE:Immediate
TO: All Press
CONTACT: Kelly Kordzik, Pres. Texas Nanotechnology Initiative, (512)370-2851


Ross Perot to Open Major Nanotechnology Event in Dallas

Dallas, Texas. January 31, 2006. H. Ross Perot of Dallas, internationally renowned business leader and onetime Presidential candidate, will deliver the opening remarks at nanoTX’06 September 27, a world scale nanotechnology conference and expo held at the Dallas Convention Center (www.nanotx.biz). Chosen in 2004 as one of history's 10 greatest entrepreneurs, Mr. Perot is known to have followed advances in nanotechnology since 1999. Today Mr. Perot is heavily invested in nanotechnology firms with undervalued intellectual property rights, including trademarks, trade secrets, patents and copyrightable material. His opening message on the business of nanotechnology will be riveting, bringing new insights in his most quotable style.

Mr. Perot has a history of betting on promising technology and made the bulk of his $3.7 billion fortune by starting the data-processing company Electronic Data Systems (EDS)

Over the years Mr. Perot has received numerous awards for his business success and community service, including the Eisenhower Award for support of the nation's Armed Forces, the Winston Churchill Award, the Horatio Alger Award, the National Business Hall of Fame Award, the Smithsonian Computerworld Award (first recipient; given for contributions to the computer industry), the Sarnoff Award (for contributions to the electronics industry), Medal for Distinguished Public Service (highest civilian award presented by the Department of Defense; given for his efforts supporting U.S. prisoners of war), the Raoul Wallenberg Award (first recipient; given for lifetime service reminiscent of the Swedish diplomat), the Jefferson Award for Public Service, the Patrick Henry Award (first recipient; given to a U.S. citizen for outstanding service to his country). As a noted author, his several books include Preparing Our Country for the 21st Century.

Presented by the Texas Nanotechnology Initiative, the event carries the theme: The Promise of Tomorrow—The Business of Nanotechnology.

Also expected at nanoTX’06 is Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) who as chairman of the Department of Defense Appropriations Committee included $15 million in new funding for Research in Nanotechnology (SPRING). The program is a consortium comprised of the University of Texas (UT) at Arlington, UT-Austin, UT-Brownsville, UT-Dallas, UT-Pan American, Rice University and University of Houston, that are also participating in nanoTX’06, September 27-28, 2006.

This funding will build on that effort and continue the consortium's work to establish a collaborative network of well-equipped research centers to rapidly develop and promote
nanotechnology.

"Texas is pushing the envelope even further in research and that is certainly the case with nanotechnology," Sen. Hutchison said, who has made elevating the national profile and federal funding for Texas' higher education research a top priority.

To mark these strides in Texas, Governor Rick Perry has proclaimed the week of September 24 through September 30, 2006, as Nanotechnology Week in Texas. This is the same week nanoTX’06 world conference and trade expo is being observed in Dallas during International Nanotechnology Week. ä Dallas mayor Laura Miller also signed a similar proclamation of her own. Top minds in nanotechnology from around the world are meeting at the Dallas Convention Center Sept. 26-28, 2006 in observance of International Nanotechnology Week, ä sponsored by Lockheed Martin, Applied Materials, Texas Instruments, the Japanese Consulate, Zyvex, among other big firms and organizations in nanotechnology.

The governor’s proclamation can be seen at www.nanotx.biz, and reads in part: “…to promote awareness about nanotechnology…a campaign will be conducted during the month of September (2006). I encourage all Texans to recognize the significant role that evolving technology can play in fostering economic and technological strength.”

And it is true, the $200Million Texas Emerging Technology Fund is also a subject of study at nanoTX’06. Technologists and business leaders from around the country have been requesting detailed information on how the Texas governor’s office launched the Emerging Technology Fund. Now the office of Governor Rick Perry, in cooperation with the Texas Nanotechnology Initiative, has agreed to have two people key to the funds creation and implementation release a detailed study of the fund at nanoTX’06.

To be released are valuable insights in the creation of the fund, its passage through the Texas legislature, and how it is being implemented, told by three key people. “It was difficult and complicated in organizing technologists and businesses to get behind such an effort in a state as large as Texas,” says Kelly Kordzik, president of the Texas Nanotechnology Initiative in Austin. Kordzik is joining with the governor’s Deputy Chief of Staff, Phil Wilson, and Mark Ellison, Director of the Texas Emerging

Technology Fund at nanoTX’06 in Dallas where they will tell how to push such an effort through a legislature that is heavily focused on other budgetary items. The team will also explain how the fund is being used around the state to commercialize advanced technologies such as nanotechnology.

According to Kordzik, nanoTX’06 will draw the top minds in four vital and interrelated nanotech areas of commerce: Semiconductor/MEMS/NEMS, Defense/Homeland Security/Aerospace, Biomed/Health Sciences, and Energy/Chemical/Environment, plus an intense study of Trends/Finance/Investing by leading experts of industry in addition to H. Ross Perot. “An event of this quality and magnitude is drawing world-wide attention to Texas,” says Kordzik. “There are 40 countries with state sponsored nanotechnology programs, including Japan, UK, Korea, Canada, Australia, France, the list keeps growing.”

Cosponsoring organizations include the Nanotechnology Foundation of Texas, the Texas Healthcare & Bioscience Institute, the Association for Manufacturing Excellence, the Science Place & Planetarium, the Metroplex Technology Business Council, and others. Speakers will present the latest research on how their nanotech applications apply to business and commerce, and include such respected names as Dr. Ray H. Baughman, Director of the NanoTech Institute of the University of Texas at Dallas and the Robert A. Welch Professor of Chemistry. Dr. Baughman will speak on New Inventions of UTD’s NanoTech Institute: From Multifunctional Nanotube Fibers and Sheets to Artificial Muscles, Displays, and Devices for Energy Harvesting, Storage, and Conversion. Among other top pioneers in nanotech to speak include Dr. Handel Jones, Founder and CEO of International Business Strategies; Dr. Hans Stork, CTO at Texas Instruments;Sue Billat, Benchmark Strategies; Dr. Mark Pinto, Sr. VP and CTO at Applied Materials; Mark Hakey of IBM Corporation and Jim Von Ehr, founder of Zyvex Corporation, the first molecular nanotechnology company in the world. Zyvex is a highly renowned world-scale player in the nanotechnology community, the most publicized private nanotechnology business in the world, and the most highly regarded company in the field of molecular assemblers.

One of the highlights of nanoTX’06 will be the Nobel Laureate Legends reception, dedicated to the memory of the late Richard Smalley and Jack Kilby, where Nobel Prize winners in various related fields will openly discuss their work and the future of nanotechnology, organized by Katharine Green, Director of Corporate Communications at Zyvex. Among the six Nobel laureates to be honored will be Dr. Robert Curl of Rice University (Buckyball fame, and colleague of Dr. Smalley); Dr. Alan MacDiarmid of the University of Texas, Dallas (2000 winner, Synthetic Metals); Dr. Michael Brown, UTSW Medical Center (Medicine, 1985); Dr. Alfred Gilman, UTSW Medical Center, (Medicine, 1994); Dr. Russell Hulse, UT Dallas (Physics, 1993); Dr. Ferid Murad, UT Medical School, Houston (Medicine, 1998).

Never before such a gathering of the top minds in nanotechnology, such as Dr. James S. Murday, Superintendent of Chemistry Division, Naval Research Laboratory; Dr. Kimberly McGrath, Director of Fuel Cell Research at QuantumSphere; Dr. David Bishop, VP of Nanotechnology at Bell Labs/Lucent; Dr. Christopher Rothfuss of the U.S. State Department; Dr. Bob Gower, CEO of Carbon Nanotechnologies;Dr. Michael Polcari, CEO of Sematech; Richard P. Wallace, President & COO of KLA-Tencor;

Dr. Harold Garner at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; Dr. Vida Ilderem, VP & Director Embedded Systems &Physical Sciences Research, Motorola Labs at Motorola, Inc., to mention only a small number expected to include 150 heavyweights in nanotechnology.

Also such names as Carl Johnson, President of INFRASTRUCTURE; Dr. Zvi Yaniv, CEO at Applied Nanotech; Howard Berke, CEO at Konarka Technologies; and Jonathan Javitt, Senior Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, among others.

Trends/Finance/Investing will feature a panel of venture capitalists led by Josh Wolfe of Lux Capital and the Forbes/Wolfe nanotech Report.

Kordzik says that Dallas was chosen because “Texas is uniquely suited to host a world class nanotechnology event and the Convention Center is big enough to hold it on the dates that are ideal.”

An interview with Kelly Kordzik can be read at the nanoTX’06 web site, www.nanotx.biz/press.html

(Nanotechnology is the study and application of elements only a few atoms wide. A nanometer is one-billionth of a meter. Nanotechnology is revolutionizing a wide range of products -- from computer hard drives and sunblock cream to car tires -- and will soon become a cornerstone of every manufacturing industry. “Big business is poised…In fact, industry is now taking a leading role in setting the national nanotechnology agenda. Academic push has given way to industry pull,” as Stan Williams, Director of Quantum Science at Hewlett-Packard is quoted in Small Times Magazine.


 

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