B82B3/0033

Method for obtaining a wavy layer locally suspended on a substrate using a deformation by formation of wrinkles

A method forming an elastic undulated layer locally lying on a substrate from a structure including a strained elastic layer on a foundation in a solid state present at a surface of a rigid substrate, the method including: melting a foundation for a duration of at least 50 ns, the foundation thickness being at least 20 nm and lower than a predetermined thickness corresponding to a theoretical peak-to-peak amplitude of wrinkles, the melting generating a simultaneous deformation, by forming wrinkles, of the elastic layer and the foundation and accompanied by localized adherent contact between the elastic layer and the rigid substrate in zones separating regions of the foundation; solidifying the foundation to bring it back to the solid state; removing the foundation brought back to the solid state to suspend a layer above the substrate outside the zones of localized adherent contact, the suspended layer being undulated in accordance with the wrinkles.

Methods, systems and workpieces using mechanosynthesis

Methods and systems for building three-dimensional workpieces are described using a plurality of mechanosynthetic reactions. These methods may employ engineered reliability in reactions and process conditions and may use simulated or otherwise vetted reaction sequences, to allow workpieces requiring many reactions to be built with acceptable reliability. These many reactions may be the repetition of one or a small number of reactions, or many diverse reactions, or a combination thereof.

Convergent nanofabrication and nanoassembly methods, means and applications thereof, products and systems therefrom including methods and means for conversion of pollutants to useful products
10106401 · 2018-10-23 ·

Convergent nanofabrication and nanoassembly methods are disclosed. Molecules and/or nanostructures are bound to supported binding tools and manipulated to bond together in desired locations and orientations to yield desired precise structures. Methods for precise fabrication of materials including diamond, graphene, nanotube, -SiC (and precise modifications thereof, e.g. color centers for quantum computation and information processing and storage), halite structured materials including MgO, MgS, TiC, VN, ScN, precisely Mn doped ScN, NbN, HfC, TaC, Hf.sub.xTa.sub.yC, and metals, and graphenoid structures for photovoltaic devices are disclosed. Systems disclosed performing these methods can fabricate systems with similar capabilities, enabling allo- or self-replication, and have capabilities including: conversion and storage of energy; obtainment and processing of matter from abundant environmental sources including on other planets and fabrication of desired articles using same; converting wind power (esp. high altitude wind) to electricity with concurrent capture of CO.sub.2 and conversion thereof to useful feedstocks e.g. by reaction with CH.sub.4 from oceanic methane clathrates; growth of algae crops including food. Fabrication of arbitrarily long carbon nanotubes enable construction of orbital elevators.

Methods for forming carbon opal templates and their use in forming inverse opals

Carbon opals, a form of colloidal crystal, are composed of ordered two-dimensional or three-dimensional arrays of Monodispersed Starburst Carbon Spheres (MSCS). Methods for producing such carbon opals include oxidizing as-synthesized MSCS, for example by heating in air, to increase surface charge. Such oxidation is believed to decrease settling rates of a colloidal suspension, enabling formation of an ordered colloidal crystal. Inverse opals, composed of any of a wide variety of materials, and based on a carbon opal template, have a reciprocal structure to a carbon opal. Inverse opals are formed by methods including: forming a carbon opal as described, impregnating a desired material into pores in the carbon opal to produce a hybrid structure, and removing the carbon portion from the hybrid structure.

ANTIBACTERIAL MEDICAL IMPLANT SURFACE
20180272045 · 2018-09-27 ·

Aspects include methods of fabricating antibacterial surfaces for medical implant devices including patterning a photoresist layer on a silicon substrate and etching the silicon to generate a plurality of nanopillars. Aspects also include removing the photoresist layer from the structure and coating the plurality of nanopillars with a biocompatible film. Aspects also include a system for preventing bacterial infection associated with medical implants including a thin silicon film including a plurality of nanopillars.

ANTIBACTERIAL MEDICAL IMPLANT SURFACE
20180272046 · 2018-09-27 ·

Aspects include methods of fabricating antibacterial surfaces for medical implant devices including patterning a photoresist layer on a silicon substrate and etching the silicon to generate a plurality of nanopillars. Aspects also include removing the photoresist layer from the structure and coating the plurality of nanopillars with a biocompatible film. Aspects also include a system for preventing bacterial infection associated with medical implants including a thin silicon film including a plurality of nanopillars.

ANTIBACTERIAL MEDICAL IMPLANT SURFACE
20180272047 · 2018-09-27 ·

Aspects include methods of fabricating antibacterial surfaces for medical implant devices including patterning a photoresist layer on a silicon substrate and etching the silicon to generate a plurality of nanopillars. Aspects also include removing the photoresist layer from the structure and coating the plurality of nanopillars with a biocompatible film. Aspects also include a system for preventing bacterial infection associated with medical implants including a thin silicon film including a plurality of nanopillars.

ANTIBACTERIAL MEDICAL IMPLANT SURFACE
20180272048 · 2018-09-27 ·

Aspects include methods of fabricating antibacterial surfaces for medical implant devices including patterning a photoresist layer on a silicon substrate and etching the silicon to generate a plurality of nanopillars. Aspects also include removing the photoresist layer from the structure and coating the plurality of nanopillars with a biocompatible film. Aspects also include a system for preventing bacterial infection associated with medical implants including a thin silicon film including a plurality of nanopillars.

Method For Preparing Porous Aromatic Framework Membranes Based on Inorganic Salt Template Method

The present disclosure relates to the field of porous material synthesis, and particularly to a method for preparing porous aromatic framework membranes based on an inorganic salt template method. It aims at the problem of difficulty of preparation of porous aromatic framework membranes in large scale and large size. It uses alkynyl-containing building units and bromine-containing building units as raw materials and obtains continuous, dense, defect-free porous aromatic framework membranes through Sonogashira-Hagihara coupling polymerization. It specifically successfully prepares porous aromatic framework nanosheets on an inorganic salt substrate, and then produces a centimeter-scale large size continuous porous aromatic framework membrane through self-assembly. The method has mild conditions, a simple preparation process, and it is easy to operate. The prepared membranes have high yield and large area, and meet the requirements of actual industrial production.

Sensor capable of sensing pressure by means of the deformation of a wrinkled piezoelectric layer

A pressure-sensitive sensor including a substrate supporting a piezoelectric layer of a piezoelectric material. The piezoelectric layer includes surface undulations as wrinkles on which pressure is exerted upon use of the sensor. The piezoelectric layer is sandwiched between two electrodes for collecting charges generated by deformation of the piezoelectric layer.