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SiC abrasive papers increase remove rate by up to 20% 

Testing and QA/QC facilities with bottlenecks or a need to increase productivity may benefit from CarbiMet2 silicon carbide grinding paper by Buehler, Lake Bluff, IL...

Measurement versatility 

The Roundtest RA-220 compact measuring machine from Mitutoyo America Corp, Aurora, IL, provides these analysis options...

IBM reinvents medical diagnostic testing 

IBM's one-step point-of-care-diagnostic test is based on a silicon chip that can test for many diseases, including cardiovascular. Following a heart attack,...

Ceramics update mass spectrometers 

As mass spectroscopy becomes ever more important to drug discovery and development and pharmaceutical quality assurance, companies making spectrometers...

Medical-material cutters 

The Delta AbrasiMatic 300 series of abrasive cutters are for cutting medical materials or devices...

‘Driving’ nerve-cell research 

State-of-the-art miniature motors are playing a pivotal role in the micro-world of nerve cells when it comes to research to develop new therapies for Parkinson’s disease and other nervous disorders. Data are also being used to improve the use of control interfaces for artificial limbs, writes Jim Lostetter in the August issue of Medical Design. Lostetter is Manager–Faulhaber DC Motors, MicroMo Electronics (micromo.com), Clearwater, FL. ...

Smart tracking of animal behavior 

The Smart System, a video tracking system by Harvard Apparatus, Holliston, MA, evaluates behavior in experimental animals...

Implantable chip could be an artificial pancreas 

Implanting a medical IC just under the skin would let it measure blood chemicals and release drugs based on what it senses...

Research shows ‘monkeying around’ may benefit the paralyzed 

Monkeys taught to play a computer game were able to overcome wrist paralysis with an experimental device that might lead to new treatments for patients with stroke and spinal cord injury, according to an Associated Press report...

Microscope allows watching molecular interactions 

Researchers at Duke University, Durham, N.C., say they've developed a microscope with the depth and resolution that lets them peer so deep into living...

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