R&D Magazine

Featured Headlines from the R&D Daily
Computer compel cars to cooperate
Colon cancer screening technique shows promise
A bright future for the 60-year light bulb?


Search R&D
 
Search Tips

FREE SUBSCRIPTIONS to R&D Magazine and Newsletters
The R&D Daily
   Recent Newsletters
   Subscribe
   Contact
   Advertise
   Digital Library

Laboratory Design
   Newsletter Homepage
   Digital Edition
   Subscribe












Awards

R&D 100 Awards

Lab of the Year

Product Solutions

R&D Product Showcase



E-mail R&D Data Acquisition Newsletter Archive
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
January 4, 2007

sponsored by:
DCC Corporation
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
November 2, 2006

sponsored by:
National Instruments
2007 Lab Design
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
September 6, 2006

sponsored by:
National Instruments
2006 Lab Design
SC&I Webcast
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
July 5, 2006

sponsored by:
National Instruments
2006 Lab Design
2006 Mems Forecast
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
June 1, 2006

sponsored by:
Keithley Instruments
SC&I Webcast
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
May 4, 2006

sponsored by:
National Instruments
ReedLink
Barnstead
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
April 4, 2006

sponsored by:
Fluke
Keithley Instruments
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
March 3, 2006

sponsored by:
National Instruments
Laboratory Design Confrence
SC&I Webcast
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
January 5, 2006

sponsored by:
National Instruments
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
November 22, 2005

sponsored by:
Fluke
Research Lab Expo
R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
October 17, 2005

sponsored by:
RED Herring/NanoCommerce/SEMI NanoForum 2005
Fluke

R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
September 28, 2005

sponsored by:
Fluke

LI Expo

R&D Data Acquisition newsletter
October 19, 2005

sponsored by:
Fluke

NanoCommerce & SEMI NanoForum- house

 




Editor's Take
Paul Livingstone: Senior Editor - R&D Magazine
R&D 100: Spacebound and multicore
July 2, 2009

On July 15, the editors of R&D Magazine will announce the winners of the 47th annual R&D 100 Awards. As always, these are the cream of the crop in high-tech products from a wide spectrum of innovators. We’ll see winners from tiny start-up companies boldly entering new markets. We’ll see highly refined instruments from top science OEMs. We’ll see elegant solutions to problems deceptively simple and horrendously complex. And we’ll probably see some wild stuff from research labs around the country and abroad.

Whether we’ll also glimpse a winner that has an extra “wow” factor that makes it household name (think fax machine, Blu-Ray, Kodak film) for decades remains to be seen, but it’s safe to predict that, behind the scenes, many of this year’s R&D 100 Awards winners will have a lasting impact.

The frequent newsmaking ability of former winners leads me to this conclusion. Earlier this week, research and analysis firm Frost & Sullivan announced that it had presented NeXolve Corp. with a product innovation award for its CORIN polyimide, which was a 2008 R&D 100 winner entered by NeXolve’s parent corporation, ManTech International. The colorless, transparent, organic/inorganic nanocomposite material has been tapped as a lightweight replacement for glass in space-borne photovoltaic arrays. Such arrays will likely become far more commonplace as efforts like the International Space Station and lunar exploration proceed.

On the national laboratory side of things, software advances have given rise to whole new pseudo-agencies, such as DOE’s Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) program, which is devoted to solving complex and numerically immense physical problems using massively parallel supercomputers. In June of this year, a 2005 R&D 100 winner, VisIt, was stretched to new performances levels by leveraging up to 32,000 processing cores to process datasets of a staggering 500 billion to 2 trillion zones, or grid points. VisIt is the sort of fluids visualization tool that will be used to characterize reactions like those that will take place in the National Ignition Facility. Understanding exactly how these reactions might take place will be crucial to cracking the puzzle of fusion, and colorful visuals are a fast way to gain insights into the mathematics of the processes.

These are just two recent examples of R&D 100 Awards winners making a splash. It will be interesting to see in a couple of weeks what new waves will be set in motion.

More From the Editors


Events Calendar

More Events



























Bioscience Technology Chromatography Techniques Drug Discovery & Development Laboratory Equipment Pharmaceutical Processing R&D Scientific Computing
Advantage Business Media © Copyright 2009 Advantage Business Media
Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Advertise With Us