Archive for the ‘Other’ Category

i-Team Carbon Nanotubes for 2010 Lent Term

For the upcoming Lent term I’ll once again be mentoring a group of students doing an i-Teams project. This term we’ll be looking at which applications for carbon nanotubes would benefit most from a production process that slashes the cost of producing nanotubes by an order of magnitude - a production process developed by a group lead by Prof. Derek Fray of the Department of Materials Science at the University of Cambridge

Unlike most current production technologies the new process creates carbon nanotubes from the solid phase - from graphite. This means that production is far more efficient and production capacity is greatly increased.

Prof. Fray’s team has also shown that they can modify the production process to produce carbon nanotubes that are filled with metals such as tin. The use of these filled nanotubes in Li-ion batteries has shown to greatly increase their capacity per unit weight - a very important consideration for future generations of hybrid or all-electric vehicles.

Posted by Marc on December 8th, 2009 No Comments

First Mju-tec product

In the course of doing client- or internal projects we sometimes come up with ideas for spin-off products. Some of these we’ll bring to market ourselves under the mju-tec brand.

The first mju-tec product will be the PAM401 4-channel pico-ammeter. PAM401 is a USB device so a standard PC is used to control the instrument and view the results. The most sensitive range will measure currents up to 15pA with 20-bit resolution - in this case measurement bandwidth is limited to 1 sample per second. Maximum sampling rate is 3kHz for full-scale ranges of 50nA and upward to 7000nA.

PAM401 pico-ammeter

PAM401 pico-ammeter

We’re still fleshing out the application software and are open to suggestions from potential clients - let us know what features would be useful.

Posted by Marc on December 7th, 2009 No Comments

Article in Daily Telegraph of 30 September 2009

My client Inscentinel and a prototype explosives detector I designed and built for them (see case study) were the subject of a page 3 article in the Daily Telegraph by Richard Savill - the full text follows:

Bees, latest weapon in the war on terrorism

Honeybees trained to sniff out explosives could soon be used at airports in the fight against terrorism.

Researchers have trained bees to extend their proboscis when smelling a particular explosive and have also developed a “sniffer box” to indicate when the bees show signs of detecting explosives. A spokesman for Inscentinel, of Harpenden, Herts, said teams of sniffer bees could one day be part of the screening process at airports and other venues, including museums and major sporting events.

The bees are know to use their sense of smell in the wild when they are gathering nectar to make honey and extending their tongue or proboscis indicates that they have found their target. Inscentinel thought this trait could be harnessed to help the fight against terrorism. Before being placed inside the detector, the bees are conditioned by giving them a reward of sugared water when exposed to the smell of explosives.

The prototype “sniffer box” model holds 36 bees in small containers. Air is sucked by a fan into the box through plastic tubes and passes over the bees. If explosives are in the air, each trained bee will stick out its proboscis. An optical system is embedded inside the container so that whenever the bee extends its tongue it breaks a beam of light, which then triggers a signal through the computer.

Unlike sniffer dogs which require months of training, it takes only a few hours to train the bees. “The advantage of bees over other animals is that they are really sensitive, cheap and are everywhere in the world”, said Mathilde Briens, the head of research and development at Inscentinel. “The training all revolves around response and reward, a classical Pavlovian conditioning of the honeybees. We expose the bees to the odour, say the smell of TNT explosive, for a few seconds and simultaneously give the bees a reward of sugar syrup.”

It is not just explosives the insects can sniff out. In many cases they can out-detect even the most sophisticated of electronic sensors, picking up tiny concentrations of substances from drugs to food products, and even dry rot.

The machine is not yet commercially available, but has been partially funded by the Home Office OSCT (Office for Security and Counter Terrorism). The company said it had carried out successful tests with the Government. Inscentinel, a small company of three staff and two directors, said the bees could be trained to sniff out anything from home-made fertiliser bombs, to demolition dynamite and C-4 plastic explosives. The company said the device could also be used for medical research, detecting chemicals in a patient’s breath, urine or blood.

The story in pictures can be found here.

Posted by Marc on October 2nd, 2009 No Comments