A Thermometer In A Nanotube
Stone Rhino writes: "Yet another marvel has been created in the quest to create minature machines: a thermometer of liquid gallium within a carbon nanotube. The New York Times has an article on this. The thermometer is 10 microns long and measures temperatures from 120-950 degrees farenheit. Of course, the part I find most impractical about it is the fact that you need a scanning electron microscope to read it."
But do you want that scanning microscope stuck up in your ass as well?
Well, okay, but do you want it in there the whole time they take your temperature?
you need a scanning electron microscope to read it.
:)
I can't wait for the day that someone will figure out how to just hook bluetooth up to this thing
a better use of this (does this even have a use, other than proof-of-concept yet?) might be to, um, install one of these on nanobots, and have the liquid metal spurt from the end....somehow alerting the operator that the nanobots are about to overheat.
that's fascinating though, i was under the impression that carbon atoms were pretty small, and a nanotube would only be about 6 atoms across...from what i recall, lithium is pretty far away from carbon on the periodic chart. how does one fit one (or more) lithium atoms inside this tiny tiny tube?
moox. for a new generation.
...asked about carbon nanotube thermometers revealed about their own research: "These go to eleven (microns)."
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I just wish my mom had one of these, when she wanted to take my rectal temperature.
they are closed source.
For all the SI oriented people:
120-950 degrees farenheit
equals
322-783 Kelvin
what is wrong with those SI units anyway?
"We live in our minds, and existance is the attempt to bring that life into physical reality" Ayn Rand
When the First transistor was made, who would have predicted how we'd be using them now?
This thermometer probably isn't too useful on its own, but just shows that stuff you can build from 'big' components can also be done in nano scale.
I wish I was working in nanotech....
But it's just one more component that could be a very useful thing to have when we start using nanotech and mems on a larger scale.
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