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Polarized Light Makes Special Glass Grow

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R. Winn Hardin

CAMBRIDGE, UK -- Science has pursued organic polymers in the quest for light-powered, nano-size switches, motors and pumps. Now, researchers at the University of Cambridge have developed an inorganic glass that expands and contracts in response to polarized light. The same optically induced pressure that bent this atomic force microscope cantilever could be used to create nanoswitches. Chalcogenides make the glass unique, said Mark Welland of the university's department of engineering. Chalcogenides are materials containing selenium, tellurium or sulfur. "There's a number of industrial...Read full article

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    Published: November 1997
    Basic ScienceindustrialMicroscopyResearch & TechnologyTech Pulse

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