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Nick Fahrenkopf
Albany, New York

In 1955 while addressing the National Academy of Sciences Richard Feynman stated "Scientific knowledge is a body of statements of varying degrees of certainty." As usual, Feynman's statement was spot on, and holds true decades later. In his famous "Plenty of Room at the Bottom" lecture Feynman talked about what we now call nanotechnology, and all the different applications. Here I am, half a century later, working "at the bottom" and living in a world of uncertainty. I hope to share some of the exciting discoveries at the nanoscale and explain how they apply to my passion of biotechnology- as well as the everyday world.

My posts are presented as opinion and commentary and do not represent the views of LabSpaces Productions, LLC, my employer, or my educational institution.

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Comment by Brian Krueger, PhD in New Year's (Lab) Resolutions

Read and write are always good resolutions for a scientist.  I have to agree with those.  We have a couple papers that need to get out.  I think my biggest resolution will be to focus more on my. . .Read More
Jan 03, 2012, 7:54am

I make 25,000 a year as a grad student at the University of Washington.  I was used to working at crap jobs and making less than that per year, so its a joy getting paid to study what I love.  It. . .Read More
Dec 22, 2011, 11:55pm

I beg to differ with what you've displeyed. There is a great connecction between engineering/engineers and scientists. They can work together with the same motive and still achieve their dream. sci. . .Read More
Dec 13, 2011, 5:12am
Comment by yannisguerra in Error, Will Robinson, ERROR!

Nice. This is a very useful post. It gives both the learning points and some solutions at the same time. Great work.   . . .Read More
Nov 23, 2011, 12:28am
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Thanks to Flickr users kevindooley and DESQie for their art I integrated into the blog's header image.
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Last by Nick Fahrenkopf on Aug 02, 2011, 3:00pm
I’m a molecular biologist trapped in the body of someone with a physics degree. I’m a member of a bacteriology lab trapped in a college of “Nanoscale Science and Engineering”. As such, while I try to do cool nanoscale things with biological materials, I’m surrounded by physicists and electrical engineers along with their research projects and problems.

Don’t get me wrong, it is often very interesting and downright “cool stuff”. For now I’ll skip hot electrons and ballistic transport, or density functional theory calculations and focus on some buzz words you might have heard:

  • Carbon nanotubes (CNTs)
  • Graphene
  • Buckyballs
In a word, they’re called fullerenes. These materials are made of one thing: carbon. Just carbon, and nothing but carbon. Why are different formulations of carbon so exciting and worth spending millions if not billions of dollars on? As with just about anything in nanotechnology, matter behaves differently at the nanoscale. Graphite (in pencils) is pretty boring. Diamonds, while pretty (and apparently friendly to women) are pretty inert and solid. The carbon allotropes have little to do with their nanoscale cousins, although that’s not to say we can’t turn on into the other.



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