Technology
 
    
  
+Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF
    Home > Newszone > Technology > Technology Digest >
  National
  Biz/Finance
  BusinessFocus
  Technology
    Photo News  
    Technology Digest  
    Game  
    Economics Class for Youth  
  Arts & Living
  Sports
  Opinion
  Community
  Special
  Science
  The Learning Times
     About English News
     iBT TOEFL
     Essay
     
 
   07-23-2009 02:00 여성 음성 남성 음성 News List
Korean Researchers Develop Nano-Lens


Kwang Kim,
POSTECH Researcher
By Kim Tong-hyung
Staff Reporter

A team of multinational scientists developed a technique to produce tiny, nano-sized optical lenses, a breakthrough that may open new possibilities in microscopy and bio-imaging, the researchers said Wednesday.

In a study published in peer-review journal Nature, the researchers, led by Kwang Kim, a researcher from the Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), said they found that cup-shaped organic molecules, called calyx hydroquinone (CHQ), self-assemble into a lens shape when placed on a surface.

The nano-lenses produced in this way could push lens-based magnification to resolve features beyond the limits of diffraction, or the bending of light waves around small obstacles and the spreading of waves past small openings, Kim said.

Lens-based microscopes are constrained by the diffraction limit of light, which causes the final image to contain less information that what is present in the source.

Nano-lenses developed by Kim and his colleagues deflect light in curbed beams, in contrast to conventional optical lenses, resulting in very short focal lengths. This allows them to resovle features beyond the diffraction limit, enabling features of the order of 200 nano-meters or smaller to be resolved, Kim said.

"Such spherical nanolenses provide new pathways for lens-based near-field focusing and high-resolution optical imaging at very low intensities, which are useful for bio-imaging, near-field lithography, optical memory storage, light harvesting, spectral signal enhancing, and optical nano-sensing," the researchers said in the paper published in Nature.

Kim's work was funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology's "global research lab" project, and also participated by Columbia University's Philip Kim, Laura Kaufman and Wong Chee Wei.

thkim@koreatimes.co.kr





무디스, 스페인·伊·포르투갈 신용등급 강등

美 애완동물 전용항공사 PA, 자금난 '허덕'

나노 입자, 건강에 해로울 수 있어

F-15K 운영유지비 무려 10배 급증해

정부, 인턴제 없애는 내용의 입법예고 무기한 연기

삼성, KT 스마트 TV 갈등 고조

숙명여대, 기부금 관련 갈등 휘말려

[단독] 르노삼성, 본사 모델로 한국 공략

NASA, 달 뒤편에 중간기지 건설 검토

밸런타인데이에 받고 싶은건 초콜릿 아니다


 
 
Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee sued..
Samsung CEO sued over inheritance
US court favors Dongguk over Yale
Moody's cuts ratings on Italy, Po..
BuyING
NK defectors in danger of repatri..
AhnLab rebuffs claim on stock fra..
Fine dust in Seoul and metropolit..
Judges collectively protest sanct..
Match-fixing allegations also eme..
(575) Arriving at a restaurant
Money Is Winner
More belt-tightening for Greece