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Showing 1–7 of 7 results
Advanced filters: Author: "Michael S. Strano" Clear advanced filters
  • Tiny devices have been developed that can act as the legs of laser-controlled microrobots. The compatibility of these devices with microelectronics systems suggests a path to the mass manufacture of autonomous microrobots.

    • Allan M. Brooks
    • Michael S. Strano
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 584, P: 530-531
  • Laser-based imaging can distinguish between semiconducting and metallic nanotubes in vitro and in vivo, offering a way to study the interactions of carbon nanostructures in biological systems without the use of labels.

    • Kevin Tvrdy
    • Michael S. Strano
    News & Views
    Nature Nanotechnology
    Volume: 7, P: 8-9
  • The ability of 'electric tweezers' to guide nanowires coated with biomolecules to specific locations on the surface of individual cells will allow biological processes to be studied in greater detail.

    • Andrew J. Hilmer
    • Michael S. Strano
    News & Views
    Nature Nanotechnology
    Volume: 5, P: 481-482
  • Radionuclides encapsulated within carbohydrate-functionalized carbon nanotubes set new records for in vivo radiodosage, while demonstrating zero leakage of isotopes to high-affinity organs, such as the thyroid.

    • Michael S. Strano
    News & Views
    Nature Materials
    Volume: 9, P: 467-468
  • Covalently bonding groups to the walls of carbon nanotubes has been previously observed to quench their photoluminescence. Now, it has been shown that, if you get the chemistry just right, their photoluminescence can in fact be significantly brightened by introducing defects through functionalization.

    • Qing Hua Wang
    • Michael S. Strano
    News & Views
    Nature Chemistry
    Volume: 5, P: 812-813
  • Single-walled carbon nanotubes with a helical twist have been separated into samples enriched in either the left- or right-handed forms. Many exciting experiments await these sorted nanotubes, but first we need to decide what to call them.

    • Michael S. Strano
    News & Views
    Nature Nanotechnology
    Volume: 2, P: 340-341
  • For the case of water on supported graphene, about 30% of the van der Waals interactions between the water and the substrate are transmitted through the one-atom-thick layer.

    • Chih-Jen Shih
    • Michael S. Strano
    • Daniel Blankschtein
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Materials
    Volume: 12, P: 866-869