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Wireless Technology To Test Ford E-vehicle Batteries

Ford 2011 Transit Connect (Ford Motor Company)

Ford Motor Company has built a monitoring system for lab and field tests of its electric vehicle batteries, using wireless Internet technology. The system collects real-time performance data with sensors on the vehicles’ lithium-ion batteries and transmits the data via Internet links to a secure server . . . → Read More: Wireless Technology To Test Ford E-vehicle Batteries

Medical Device Company Opening California Lab, Training Center

Integra LifeSciences of Plainsboro, New Jersey announced the opening of its Center for Research, Education and Training in Irvine, California. The new facility will offer hands-on simulated surgical training, as well as a laboratory for research and development for Integra’s products. The center will hold its first session for spine surgeons on 21 September 2010.

. . . → Read More: Medical Device Company Opening California Lab, Training Center

HHS Review Highlights Role of Business in Medical Countermeasures

(U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today released a report on the federal government’s system to produce medications, vaccines, equipment, and supplies needed to meet a health emergency. The report — Public Health Emergency Medical Countermeasure Enterprise Review: Transforming the Enterprise to Meet Long Range National . . . → Read More: HHS Review Highlights Role of Business in Medical Countermeasures

FDA Grants Orphan Status for Neuromuscular Drug

Acceleron Pharma, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company in Cambridge, Massachusetts, today said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted ACE-031, its treatment for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), with an orphan drug designation.

DMD is a debilitating and fatal genetic disorder characterized by the progressive loss of muscle strength and function. The disease affects mainly boys . . . → Read More: FDA Grants Orphan Status for Neuromuscular Drug

University Licenses Research for Deer Repellents

(John J. Mosesso, NBII)

University of Minnesota Duluth agronomist and horticulturist Tom Levar has developed a way to protect plants from browsing by deer and mice with a natural hot pepper concentrate delivered to the roots of young plants, making them inedible. Repellex USA, a maker of pest repellents in Niles, Michigan has . . . → Read More: University Licenses Research for Deer Repellents

Arizona, Texas Industry Research Consortiums in Partnership

The Sensor, Signal and Information Processing center and consortium — known as SenSIP — at Arizona State University in Tempe has earned Industry/University Collaborative Research Center designation from National Science Foundation (NSF). SenSIP also formed a partnership with a similar consortium of four leading Texas research universities.

SenSIP’s work involves research on technologies used in . . . → Read More: Arizona, Texas Industry Research Consortiums in Partnership

Clearing the Air with Nanotech Concrete

Germany’s Fraunhofer-Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology (IME) in Munich, together with the German city of Fulda, and pavement manufacturer F. C. Nüdling Basaltwerke GmbH, also in Fulda, have tested a new paving material that reduces the amount of nitrogen oxide pollutants in the air.

High levels of nitrogen oxide in urban areas are . . . → Read More: Clearing the Air with Nanotech Concrete

Montana State Licensing Biomedical Technologies

(Kelly Gorham, Montana State)

Researchers at Montana State University in Bozeman have developed six new biomedical technologies available for licensing to interested companies and entrepreneurs.

– An existing clinical drug discovered to act as a potent trigger of immune cells, but also shows promise in enhancing the effectiveness of vaccines, particularly those administered . . . → Read More: Montana State Licensing Biomedical Technologies

We like comments, but …

Like other bloggers, we really like comments. But also like many other bloggers, we review all comments before publishing them. Here are a few guidelines to help get your comments published on this blog.

Keep them short. We keep most of our blog posts to a few sentences, so we like comments to do the . . . → Read More: We like comments, but …

Biofuels Plant Produces First Cellulosic Methanol

A Range Fuels Inc. plant in Soperton, Georgia — the company’s first commercial biofuels plant — has produced its first cellulosic methanol, using non-food biomass as the feedstock.

The first phase of the plant’s operations uses Range Fuels’ two-step thermo-chemical process, which combines heat, pressure, and steam to convert non-food feedstocks, such as woody biomass . . . → Read More: Biofuels Plant Produces First Cellulosic Methanol