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CNTs are cylindrical nanostructures of carbon with exceptional electrical, thermal and mechanical properties.
ENGADGET: Stanford engineers find work around for barriers to carbon nanotube computers
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The company manufactures carbon, stainless and electrical steel.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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When anticipated supply is sufficiently high, gas undercuts coal as the fuel of choice for electrical generation, which results in reduced carbon dioxide emissions, as natural gas produces only about 50% to 70% of the carbon dioxide per unit output (depending upon your metric) that coal does.
FORBES: China Talks A Green Line While The U.S. Walks One
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These are wrapped in carbon nanotubes - tiny "straws" of pure carbon that are renowned for their electrical properties - and coated with a platinum black powder.
BBC: Robotic jellyfish fuelled by hydrogen invented
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In 2008, manufacturers of skin care-products decided to avoid them in their formulations and now EU ministers have decided that nanosilver particles (used in washing machines and in shoes to get rid of nasty smells) and multiwalled carbon nanotubes should be banned in electronic and electrical products.
FORBES: Nanomaterials Are Prey To EU Ministers
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This is a cylinder composed solely of carbon atoms, and one of its properties is good electrical conductivity.
ECONOMIST: Improved devices may make better use of sunlight
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In every case, these ideas will save you money, cut energy use, and help balance your household's greenhouse gas budget -- the amount of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere to produce goods or electrical power.
CNN: 10 first steps to greener living
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As such, it possesses the novel mechanical properties of carbon nanotube-like tensile strength--in addition to high electrical conductivity.
FORBES: Five Technologies Set to Change The Decade
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The plane represented a big bet on new technology for Boeing: The plane's lightweight frame was to be built using mostly carbon-fiber composites, and it was to have an enhanced electrical system to power more systems and use less fuel than other jets.
WSJ: The Two Men Behind the 787
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Another bit of blow-back, if you will, from this experience was the prospect of finding non-carbon-footprint-engendering activities to pursue at home if we lost electrical power.
FORBES: Goodnight, Irene: Some Hurricane-Hunkering Lessons