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Consortium models the nano-world

Friday 20 May 2005 11:12

Essex-based e2v Technologies has joined a consortium set up by molecular simulation and modelling specialist Accelrys to help develop software tools for the design of nanoscale materials and devices.

ElectronicsWeekly.com  
Nanoscale modelling by Accelrys


Brian Allen, a technology strategist at e2v, said the company was "developing technology within the life science arena" for which it originally invested in the software, but has since found it can use it to gain a better understanding of the operation of existing products, for example its gas sensors.

"As we're entering the nanotechnology era, we're starting to realise that you've got to start building structures up from the atom level, rather than coming down from the bulk material," said Allen. "Really if you're wanting to understand the chemistry behind your activities then this modelling is a very powerful tool. It can cut down your experimental variables significantly."

Accelrys, which has its European HQ in Cambridge, provides a suite of models that apply to structures on a range of different scales, from a few atoms to macroscopic materials. Its Nanotechnology Consortium includes companies developing, validating, and applying simulation to a particular research area, among them Fujitsu and Imperial College.

"What we're doing is providing first-line user guidance of what new models we are requiring - what is it in physics that's not yet developed in the modelling capability that we actually would like," said Allen.

e2vtechnologies.com

 

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