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Nanotech Brings Cheap Flat TVs From Diamond Dust

neutron_p writes "Nanotech scientists are going to develop new TV display technology made from diamond dust. It opens up the possibility of cheaper and more power efficient flat panel displays, for use in wide screen digital TVs and many other applications. Toshiba recently announced plans to launch a television based on a new flat-panel display technology called SED (Surface-conduction Electron-emitter Display) in 2005. Sony and others have been working for several years on another technology called FED (Field Emission Display) but that too has yet to reach commercialization."

14 of 193 comments (clear)

  1. cheap? by confusion · · Score: 4, Funny
    Combining nanotech (expensive) with diamonds (expensive) yields cheap monitors?

    It's been a long day, so I know I must be missing something

    Jerry
    http://www.syslog.org/

    1. Re:cheap? by chochos · · Score: 4, Informative

      Probably synthetic diamonds, you know, the ones made in high-pressure ovens that cost about $50 and are the bigger than a fist, and are great for this kind of stuff. There was an article on Wired a while back, which I think was also mentioned in /. about this technology. But since nanotech is being mentioned this time, then probably now the diamond dust is being created by nanobots?

  2. Pefect anniversary gift by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    This diamond television means I can now buy the expensive tv I've always wanted and call it an anniversary gift.

    "But, honey, you said you wanted diamonds, right?"

  3. TV's made of diamonds by loteck · · Score: 4, Funny

    Finally, men and women will be able to agree that buying a bigger one is a good idea.

  4. What a perfect use of new technology. by Canthros · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bring stupidity into my living room with crystal clarity. I can't wait.

    --
    Canthros
  5. Grandpa by ValuJet · · Score: 4, Funny

    Make a tv out of Grandpa

  6. Diamonds aren't rare by Schezar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Diamonds aren't rare. In fact, there are more jewel-grade diamonds of large size and high quality than there are people.

    The diamond industry works entirely off of the perception in most people that diamonds are rare. They strictly limit the supply, and spend more money advertising than they do mining.

    If you don't believe me, take a piece of diamond jewelry to several jewelers and have it appraised. They'll all quote a fairly large sum. Now try to sell it to them. They'll offer you maybe 5-10% of what they quoted.

    If you shop around, you'll find that you can't actually sell a diamond for anywhere near what it's "worth."

    That said, synthetic diamonds scare the living hell out of the diamond industry, since they're cheap to manufacture and indistinguishable physically from a "real" diamond (which itself isn't rare, but I digress).

    These displays will drive more research and capital into the diamond manufacturing market, which will drive diamond prices down.

    --
    GeekNights!
    Late Night Radio for Geeks!
    1. Re:Diamonds aren't rare by pz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I've been saying for about 10 years that the jewlery diamond industry is doomed. Here's the reasoning.

      1. Silicon ingots used by chip foundries are the purest substance available to man in production quantities, at 7 nines (99.99999% pure).

      2. The semiconductor industry doesn't think twice about investing billions -- BILLIONS -- of dollars in manufacturing and R&D.

      3. Diamond is a very interesting base out of which to build semiconductors: it has (from memory) a large band-gap, excellent thermal characteristics, and some blindingly fast transistors have been made in the lab out of it.

      Once the semiconductor folks decide that they want to do large-scale diamond manufacturing, there's a huge impetus to generate higher quality diamond than has ever been mined, in quantities that will make the collection of mined dimonds seem a drop in the bucket. The only hope DeBeers has at that point is to market based on the imperfections of natural stones, since perfection, their current stock-in-trade, will no longer be a selling point.

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    2. Re:Diamonds aren't rare by aluminum+boy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, it is the flaws (to a degree) that make a diamond valuable. For instance, colored diamonds (e.g. pink) contain a flaw that give them color. A trained jewler can quickly tell the diffrence between "perfect" industrial diamonds and "flawed" ones. Really, the most valuable natural diamonds are the most perfect imperfect ones.

  7. Re:SED vs. FED? by worst_name_ever · · Score: 4, Funny
    Neal Stephenson's Age of Diamonds?

    I always thought his earlier book The Snow That Crashed was better.

    --

    In Soviet Rush, today's Tom Sawyer gets high on you.
  8. RTFA by marcus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you had RTFA, you'd know that no one here knows more than you do know. ;-) The linked piece was nothing but fluff, no substance at all. Here's a summary:

    "Nanotech is great. Diamonds are great. Venture capitalists are great. Flat screens are great. We are going to be rich!

    1) Nanotech
    2) Diamond dust
    3) Flat screens
    4) Profit!"

    What's missing is something worth reading.

    --
    Good judgement comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgement.
    - W. Wriston, former Citibank CEO
  9. New Definition of "Nanotech" by Baldrson · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Since we have now redefined nanotech to include anything that deals in nanometer scale structures, rather than artificially constructed mechanisms with molecules as components, how far back in time can we claim "nanotech" to have been practiced? The first crystal growth? Perhaps to the first time a crystal was cleaved along certain atomic planes?

    Perhaps we could do something similar with "space settlement" and just sort of forget that 1973 was the year that western civilization turned away from its destiny in space and began threatning the planet with globalist growth.

    That should make everyone feel better too.

  10. Re:So informative by gaber1187 · · Score: 4, Informative
    The main publications page for this group is listed here:
    http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/pt/diamond/publicat.htm


    Looks like they are using Diamond Like Carbon quite often... so its a quasi-zinc-blend structure apparently.


    With field emission they are generating electrons so somehow the electrons get enough energy to reach the vacuum level. I wonder how efficient this is since diamond's bandgap is something like 5.5 eV.


    -Gabe

  11. Here's the original press release... by argent · · Score: 4, Informative

    Once again, the physorg honeypot grabs slashdot eyeballs. Physorg takes press releases and puts them up, with bad formatting, on ugly web pages... with no links to the original source.

    So here's some missing links: the press release at Bristol, the diamond group at bristol and the home page of Advance Nanotech.

    As you can see, that's a chemical vapor deposition group, so there's no need to grind up diamond dust from real diamonds. :) It's also, um, not exactly what I'd call "nanotech"... unless you consider any product involving structures at the molecular scale (like, oh, wood, or portland cement) to be "nanotech".