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Cornell Produces Brighter Dots

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ITHACA, N.Y., May 20 -- By surrounding fluorescent dyes with a protective silica shell, Cornell University researchers announced this week they have created fluorescent nanoparticles with possible applications in displays, biological imaging, optical computing, sensors and microarrays such as DNA chips. These are all applications for which quantum dots have been used or are being considered. But the new nanoparticles offer an appealing alternative, because they are more chemically inert and cost less. "People have done superb experiments with quantum dots that were not previously possible,"...Read full article

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    Published: May 2005
    Basic ScienceConsumerCornellCornell dotsCU dotsfluorescent nanoparticlesindustrialMicroscopyNews & Featuresoptical microscopesQ dots quantum dotsSensors & Detectors

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