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Nanotechnology has been pretty hyped in recent years with articles in
magazines and even regular newspapers promising engineered materials with
fantastic properties in the future. However, I though it was still strictly
something in the labs at this point and not ready for commercialization yet.
And then, some weeks ago, a company called Nanocover has been showing TV
commercials in national TV about their nanocover products, available right
here and right now, and looking almost unbelievable, just like you'd
imagine. Their commercial shows a white sofa lowered down in a red liquid
and then lifted up again, still completely white. In the end we see the arm
of a (supposed) scientist brushing a few remaining red drops off the sofa
with his coat sleeve, and they just slide off like small balls, leaving no
trail.
http://www.nanocover.com
They have products to repel water, oil and dirt, other products to avoid
mist on glass and mirrors, products for fire protection and various other
things. There are separate products designed to bind to different
materials - textile, steel, wood, plastic etc.
You can read about the products in the Danish, Norwegian and English
versions of the site while the German version has no information yet. It
seems that products can only actually be bought in Denmark so far, but they
are working on it for the three other countries too (and many more I
presume). It's not even very expensive (prices are listed in the Danish and
Norwegian versions of the site only). I'd try it out, if it wasn't for the
fact that the safety measures for spraying the stuff only things make it
somewhat cumbersome, but then again, not much more cumbersome than if you
want to paint some furniture or something.
The commercial can be seen here:
http://www.nanocover.dk/om_nanocover/reklamefilm/nanocover_tekstil__laeder_.html
So, the nanotechnologic future is here...?
Rune
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"Rune" <aut### [at] runevisioncom> wrote in message
news:4710a2c6$1@news.povray.org...
> And then, some weeks ago, a company called Nanocover has been showing TV
> commercials in national TV about their nanocover products, available right
> here and right now, and looking almost unbelievable, just like you'd
> imagine. Their commercial shows a white sofa lowered down in a red liquid
> and then lifted up again, still completely white.
Fabric protectors (like Scotchgard) and water repellants have been available
for ages (that's why people wax their cars), nothing "nano", just regular
technology marketed under a hype branding. Also, not all (red) liquids are
adhesive - depends on surface tension and cohesivity (mercury won't "stick",
for instance).
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somebody wrote:
> "Rune" <aut### [at] runevisioncom> wrote in message
> news:4710a2c6$1@news.povray.org...
>
>> And then, some weeks ago, a company called Nanocover has been showing TV
>> commercials in national TV about their nanocover products, available right
>> here and right now, and looking almost unbelievable, just like you'd
>> imagine. Their commercial shows a white sofa lowered down in a red liquid
>> and then lifted up again, still completely white.
>
> Fabric protectors (like Scotchgard) and water repellants have been available
> for ages (that's why people wax their cars), nothing "nano", just regular
> technology marketed under a hype branding. Also, not all (red) liquids are
> adhesive - depends on surface tension and cohesivity (mercury won't "stick",
> for instance).
That doesn't mean that this particular company *isn't* using
nanotechnology. Actually this sort of application sounds a lot more
feasible than other SF nanotech tricks...Scotchgard and its ilk might
have been around a while, but that doesn't mean you can't do a lot
better by playing with how you apply it or what exactly you're applying.
--
Tim Cook
http://home.bellsouth.net/p/PWP-empyrean
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PGP-(--) t* 5++>+++++ X+ R* tv+ b++(+++) DI
D++(---) G(++) e*>++ h+ !r--- !y--
------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------
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"somebody" wrote:
> Fabric protectors (like Scotchgard) and water repellants have been
> available
> for ages (that's why people wax their cars), nothing "nano", just regular
> technology marketed under a hype branding.
No, while some brands are like this, NanoCover does use actual
nanotechnology. I found out there was a program in TV a while ago (I was
able to see it online) testing if their products lived up to the commercial.
Their results were mixed - some of the fabric repelled the red fruit juice
they spilled on it, while other parts of the fabric did not. The reason was
unclear - maybe insufficient or incorrect preparation of the textile was my
impression, while they would not admit this and simply didn't comment on the
strange inconsistent behavior. They did show the NanoCover liquid to a
university professor though, who confirmed (with a nanomicroscope or
whatever it's called) that it did contain nano-particles, but who could not
comment on how effective it would be, saying that it could only be
determined through testing.
> Also, not all (red) liquids are adhesive - depends on surface
> tension and cohesivity (mercury won't "stick", for instance).
Hmm, I dunno... It was a transparent red liquid. Anyway, regardless of what
was used in the commercial, the hosts of the TV show was able to partly
replicate the results - though not entirely.
I have been searching for online forum posts of people with experience with
these products, and while some results are disappointing, others are
reportedly very brilliant. Some of the posts I found very trustworthy,
particularly one from a person who had tried their products on several
materials and reported no effect with some of the things he had tried, but
big satisfaction with others.
Rune
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Rune wrote:
> They did show the NanoCover liquid to a
> university professor though, who confirmed (with a nanomicroscope or
> whatever it's called) that it did contain nano-particles,
I'm not sure I'd trust the opinion of someone who called them
"nano-particles". :-)
The difference between nano-tech and chemistry is (for the most part)
the design and manufacturing, not the final product. (Unless you're
talking about actual nano machinery, like atomic-sized engines.)
I.e., if the "nano-cover" works by having little gripping claws to hold
it to the fabric, and a set of bellows on the other side to blow water
away, maybe you could see that with a 'scope. Otherwise, I'm not sure
how you'd determine whether it's really "nano" or not.
--
Darren New / San Diego, CA, USA (PST)
Remember the good old days, when we
used to complain about cryptography
being export-restricted?
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Darren New wrote:
> Rune wrote:
>> They did show the NanoCover liquid to a university professor though,
>> who confirmed (with a nanomicroscope or whatever it's called)
A decent scanning electron microscope would be sufficient.
> I'm not sure I'd trust the opinion of someone who called them
> "nano-particles". :-)
Nothing wrong with the term. I've heard it used in proper context before.
> I.e., if the "nano-cover" works by having little gripping claws to hold
> it to the fabric, and a set of bellows on the other side to blow water
> away, maybe you could see that with a 'scope. Otherwise, I'm not sure
> how you'd determine whether it's really "nano" or not.
It just refers to the size of whatever discrete entities you're dealing
with. If they're less than 100 microns across I'd be perfectly happy
referring to them as such, but it usually refers to particles (and, one
day perhaps, machines) that are tens of nanometres across or smaller.
Most nanotech is just particles at the moment, or nanoscale features on
normal substrates. I think. Fullerenes count too, like buckyballs or
buckytubes. There's all sorts of novel applications but it's mainly just
paints and coatings at the moment. I think actual machines are quite a
way off yet...
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Bill Pragnell wrote:
> If they're less than 100 microns across
I meant nm, of course.
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> Fabric protectors (like Scotchgard) and water repellants have been
> available
> for ages (that's why people wax their cars), nothing "nano", just regular
> technology marketed under a hype branding. Also, not all (red) liquids are
> adhesive - depends on surface tension and cohesivity (mercury won't
> "stick",
> for instance).
Yep, it really does depend on what liquid they used. I used to have a set
of marker pens for measuring the stickyness of surfaces (I forget what the
scale was, but they were numbered 1-50 or something). The 1 was like
mercury, it would stick to nothing (not even normal paper) and would always
form blobs. The 20-30 would mark and stick to pretty much anything (like a
permanent marker). We were using them when we had problems with print not
sticking very well to plastic wrap. They could have easily used a liquid
like I had in my marker pen #1 and it would pretty much "run off" of
anything you put in it.
One of the most interesting uses of "nanotech" would be to keep your car
windscreen clean, without the need for wipers or a cloth to get off splatted
flies.
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scott wrote:
>> Fabric protectors (like Scotchgard) and water repellants have been
>> available
>> for ages (that's why people wax their cars), nothing "nano", just regular
>> technology marketed under a hype branding. Also, not all (red) liquids
>> are
>> adhesive - depends on surface tension and cohesivity (mercury won't
>> "stick",
>> for instance).
>
> Yep, it really does depend on what liquid they used. I used to have a
> set of marker pens for measuring the stickyness of surfaces (I forget
> what the scale was, but they were numbered 1-50 or something). The 1
> was like mercury, it would stick to nothing (not even normal paper) and
> would always form blobs. The 20-30 would mark and stick to pretty much
> anything (like a permanent marker). We were using them when we had
> problems with print not sticking very well to plastic wrap. They could
> have easily used a liquid like I had in my marker pen #1 and it would
> pretty much "run off" of anything you put in it.
>
> One of the most interesting uses of "nanotech" would be to keep your car
> windscreen clean, without the need for wipers or a cloth to get off
> splatted flies.
Indeed, and such coatings already exist in certain applications. For
example, the application of TiO2 (titanium dioxide) on glass to create a
surface that is "self cleaning". It's described as nano technology
because of the scale of the reaction that takes place and the thickness of
the coating, even though it's not nano technology in the sci fi
tiny-machines sense that most people think of.
Lance.
thezone - thezone.firewave.com.au
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"Bill Pragnell" <bil### [at] hotmailcom> wrote
> Most nanotech is just particles at the moment, or nanoscale features on
> normal substrates. I think. Fullerenes count too, like buckyballs or
> buckytubes. There's all sorts of novel applications but it's mainly just
> paints and coatings at the moment. I think actual machines are quite a
> way off yet...
That's the bottomline. What's now called nano-science used to be known as
colloidal science (or in the other case, just solid state technology). Any
small molecule technically qualifies as a nano-particle as well. The
nano-science, as originally intended, hasn't come to fruition yet.
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