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NANOTECH ON DISPLAY

机译:纳米技术展示

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In the samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, south of Seoul, South Korea, what looks from a distance like an ordinary 38-inch television plays an endless loop of commercials for James Bond movies. Like the displays increasingly common in American homes, it is a big, flat rectangle of color and motion in a high-tech plastic frame. But unlike the images on an ordinary TV, the ones on this lab model are generated by a layer of carbon nanotubes shooting electrons at a phosphor screen like so many tiny cannonballs. Around the world, television screens are emblems of stodgy domesticity. But this one is in the vanguard of tomorrow's nanotechnological revolution: it could be the first commercial product that brings nanoscale electronics into the middle-class home. Researchers around the world are racing to perfect this novel type of display, which should be brighter, sharper, and less power-hungry than current flat-panel TVs. For the moment, though, the Samsung institute appears to have the lead. "They are the ones to beat," says Yahachi Saito, lead researcher of a rival group at Nagoya University in Japan. "They have moved very quickly." Samsung, and South Korean technology firms in general, are rarely thought of as the leading developers of hot new technologies. This is a stereotype, however, that the company is determined to change. "We are still identified, correctly, with low-cost manufacturing," says Young Joon Gil, chief technology officer at the Samsung institute. But as competitors emerge from China and other east-Asian countries, he says, Samsung "must gradually move to high-profit, high-risk innovation to survive." Nanotechnology is the most important of the risky disciplines the company hopes to mine for new products, and the nano-tube TV screens are its first fruits. Known as "field emission displays," they should be in stores, Young says, by the end of 2006, comfortably ahead of the competition.
机译:在韩国首尔以南的三星技术研究院,从远处看起来像一台普通的38英寸电视,播放着詹姆斯·邦德电影的无尽广告。就像在美国家庭中越来越常见的显示器一样,​​它是高科技塑料框架中颜色和运动的大而扁平的矩形。但是,与普通电视上的图像不同,此实验室模型上的图像是由一层碳纳米管在荧光屏上发射电子而形成的,就像许多微小的炮弹一样。在世界范围内,电视屏幕是无聊家庭生活的象征。但这是明天纳米技术革命的先锋:它可能是将纳米级电子产品带入中产阶级家庭的首个商业产品。世界各地的研究人员都在竞相完善这种新颖的显示器,与目前的平板电视相比,这种显示器应该更亮,更锐利且省电。不过目前,三星研究院似乎处于领先地位。日本名古屋大学(Nagoya University)竞争对手小组的首席研究员矢藤矢八(Yahachi Saito)说:“他们是要击败的人。” “他们的行动非常迅速。”很少有人将三星和韩国的技术公司视为热门新技术的领先开发商。但是,这是公司决定改变的刻板印象。三星研究院首席技术官扬·琼·吉尔(Young Joon Gil)说:“我们仍然正确地认识到低成本制造。”他说,但是随着竞争对手从中国和其他东亚国家中崛起,三星“必须逐渐走向高利润,高风险的创新才能生存。”纳米技术是该公司希望挖掘新产品的最危险的学科,而纳米管电视屏幕是它的第一个成果。 Young说,它们被称为“场发射显示器”,应该在商店内,到2006年底,在竞争中遥遥领先。

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