| Salmon "Fathering" Improvements in LEDs |
| Written by Philip Proefrock | ||
| Monday, 01 October 2007 | ||
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Recently, Professor Andrew Steckl, a University of Cincinnati researcher, has found that he can improve the efficiency of LEDs by using DNA, specifically, from salmon sperm. “Biological materials have many technologically important qualities — electronic, optical, structural, magnetic,” says Steckl. “But certain materials are hard for to duplicate, such as DNA and proteins.” He also wanted a source that was widely available, would not have to be mined, and was not subject to any organization or country’s monopoly. His answer? Steckl has also stated that other sources of DNA may prove to be equally useful. The US Air Force is funding this research, so the first practical applications of this will probably be in the military. via: The Register University of Cincinnati press release
Comments
(2)
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written by Eric , October 02, 2007
you can do that much with SALMON sperm?? how about MY sperm?? i am happily available to donate to the cause.
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written by jake3988 , October 04, 2007
If it could produce cheap, viable, bright leds... I'd happily donate too.
If every incandescent was switched with an equivalent LED of the same brightness our electricity output would drop by a number so large it'd boggle your mind. | ||
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