ACS Fall 2005 BNL Newsroom
The American Chemical Society's
Fall
2005 National Meeting will be held in Washington, DC, August 28 to
September 1, 2005. More than 12,000 scientists are expected to attend.
Approximately 7,000 presentations are slated for the meeting, including
several symposia that highlight important research advances. Talks on
the topics below are among those that will be presented by scientists from
Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Writing at the Nanoscale
At Brookhaven National Laboratory, scientists have developed a new chemical "writing" technique that can create lines of "ink" only a few tens of nanometers, or billionths of a meter, in width.
Scientists Describe New Way to Peer Inside Bacteria
As part of the search for better ways to track and clean up soil contaminants, scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory and Stony Brook University have developed a new way to "image" the internal chemistry of bacteria. The technique will allow scientists to "see" at the molecular level how soil-dwelling microbes interact with various pollutants.
The Role of Titanium in Hydrogen Storage
As part of ongoing research to make hydrogen a mainstream source of clean, renewable energy, scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory have determined how titanium atoms help hydrogen atoms attach to an aluminum surface.
> News Releases are prepared by the BNL Media & Communications Office.