Patents Assigned to Rice University
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Patent number: 6929764Abstract: Ordered, monodisperse macroporous polymers, their corresponding ordered, monodisperse colloids, and methods of preparing them are disclosed. The methods use an ordered, monodisperse colloidal template to define the polymer pore morphology, which in turn acts as a mold for the growth of a new ordered, monodisperse colloid. The macroporous polymer may be prepared with either spherical or ellipsoidal pores from a wide variety of polymeric systems. The new ordered, monodisperse colloid may be grown from a wide variety of materials including ceramics, semiconductors, metals and polymers. These materials are potentially useful in optical, micro-filtering and drug delivery applications.Type: GrantFiled: November 19, 2001Date of Patent: August 16, 2005Assignee: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Peng Jiang, Vicki L. Colvin
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Publication number: 20050170482Abstract: Methods of increasing yields of succinate using aerobic culture methods and a multi-mutant E. coli strain are provided. Also provided is a mutant strain of E. coli that produces high amounts of succinic acid.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 12, 2004Publication date: August 4, 2005Applicant: Rice UniversityInventors: Ka-Yiu San, George Bennett, Henry Lin
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Publication number: 20050171281Abstract: The present invention is generally directed to the block copolymerization of rigid rod polymers with carbon nanotubes (CNTs), the CNTs generally being shortened, to form nanotube block copolymers. The present invention is also directed to fibers and other shaped articles made from the nanotube block copolymers of the present invention.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 25, 2004Publication date: August 4, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Wen-Fang Hwang, Richard Smalley, Robert Hauge
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Publication number: 20050169830Abstract: The present invention is directed to the creation of macroscopic materials and objects comprising aligned nanotube segments. The invention entails aligning single-wall carbon nanotube (SWNT) segments that are suspended in a fluid medium and then removing the aligned segments from suspension in a way that macroscopic, ordered assemblies of SWNT are formed. The invention is further directed to controlling the natural proclivity of nanotube segments to self assemble into ordered structures by modifying the environment of the nanotubes and the history of that environment prior to and during the process. The materials and objects are “macroscopic” in that they are large enough to be seen without the aid of a microscope or of the dimensions of such objects.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 16, 2004Publication date: August 4, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Smalley Richard, Daniel Colbert, Kenneth Smith, Deron Walters, Michael Casavant, Chad Huffman, Boris Yakobson, Robert Hauge, Rajesh Saini, Wan-Ting Chiang, Xiao Qin
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Publication number: 20050160798Abstract: The present invention is directed to at least one method and at least one apparatus for determining the length of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs). The method generally comprises the steps of: dispersing a sample of SWNTs into a suitable dispersing medium to form a solvent-suspension of solvent-suspended SWNTs; determining the mean SWNT diameter of the solvent-suspended SWNTs; introducing the solvent-suspended SWNTs into a viscosity-measuring device; obtaining a specific viscosity for the SWNT solvent-suspension; and determining the length of the SWNTs based upon the specific viscosity by solving, for example, the Kirkwood-Auer equation corrected by Batchelor's formula for the drag on a slender cylinder for “L,” to determine the length of the SWNTs.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 30, 2004Publication date: July 28, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Matteo Pasquali, Virginia Davis, Ingrid Stepanek-Basset, A. Nicholas Parra-Vasquez, Robert Hauge
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Publication number: 20050158358Abstract: The present invention provides tissue engineering scaffolds capable of inducing extracellular matrix production by a cell attached to the tissue engineering scaffolds, the tissue engineering scaffolds comprising: a scaffold; a polymer tether covalently coupled to the scaffold; and a TGF-? molecule that is covalently coupled to the polymer tether, wherein the TGF-? molecule is present at a concentration sufficient to elicit production of extracellular matrix by the cell attached to the tissue engineering scaffold without increasing cellular proliferation of the attached cell.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 21, 2004Publication date: July 21, 2005Applicant: WILLIAM MARSH RICE UNIVERSITYInventors: Jennifer West, Brenda Mann
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Publication number: 20050158390Abstract: A method for making hollow nanoparticles, comprises a) providing an amount of a polyelectrolyte having a charge, b) providing an amount of a counterion having a valence of at least 2, c) combining the polyelectrolyte and the counterion in a solution such that the polyelectrolyte self-assembles to form spherical aggregates, and d) adding nanoparticles to the solution such that nanoparticles arrange themselves around the spherical aggregates. The polyelectrolyte may have a positive or negative charge. The charge ratio R of total charge of the counterions to the total charge of the polyelectrolyte is greater than 1.0.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 20, 2004Publication date: July 21, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Rohit Rana, Vinit Murthy, Michael Wong
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Functionalization of nanodiamond powder through fluorination and subsequent derivatization reactions
Publication number: 20050158549Abstract: The present invention is directed to functionalized nanoscale diamond powders, methods for making such powders, applications for using such powders, and articles of manufacture comprising such powders. Methods for making such functionalized nanodiamond powders generally comprise a fluorination of nanodiamond powder. In some embodiments, such methods comprise reacting fluorinated nanodiamond powder with a subsequent derivatization agent, such as a strong nucleophile.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 24, 2004Publication date: July 21, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Valery Khabashesku, Yu Liu, John Margrave, Mary Margrave -
Publication number: 20050158357Abstract: The present invention provides methods for repair or replacement of tissue comprising applying or implanting, at a site in need of repair, a tissue engineering scaffold. The present invention also provides tissue engineering scaffolds capable of inducing extracellular matrix production by a cell attached to the tissue engineering scaffold comprising: a scaffold; a polymer tether covalently coupled to the scaffold; and a matrix-enhancing molecule that is covalently coupled to the polymer tether, wherein the matrix-enhancing molecule is present at a concentration sufficient to elicit production of extracellular matrix by the cell attached to the tissue engineering scaffold without increasing cellular proliferation of the attached cell, wherein the matrix-enhancing molecule is selected from the group consisting of ascorbic acid, angiotensin II, insulin-like growth factor, and combinations thereof.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 21, 2004Publication date: July 21, 2005Applicant: WILLIAM MARSH RICE UNIVERSITYInventors: Jennifer West, Brenda Mann
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Patent number: 6913789Abstract: A gas-phase method for producing high yields of single-wall carbon nanotubes with high purity and homogeneity is disclosed. The method involves using preformed metal catalyst clusters to initiate and grow single-wall carbon nanotubes. In one embodiment, multi-metallic catalyst precursors are used to facilitate the metal catalyst cluster formation. The catalyst clusters are grown to the desired size before mixing with a carbon-containing feedstock at a temperature and pressure sufficient to initiate and form single-wall carbon nanotubes. The method also involves using small fullerenes and preformed sections of single-wall carbon nanotubes, either derivatized or underivatized, as seed molecules for expediting the growth and increasing the yield of single-wall carbon nanotubes. The multi-metallic catalyst precursors and the seed molecules may be introduced into the reactor by means of a supercritical fluid. In addition the seed molecules may be introduced into the reactor via an aerosol or smoke.Type: GrantFiled: January 29, 2002Date of Patent: July 5, 2005Assignee: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Richard E. Smalley, Robert H. Hauge, Peter Athol Willis, W. Carter Kittrell
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Publication number: 20050144669Abstract: The present invention generally relates to the production and expression of microRNA (miRNA) in plants. In some cases, production and expression of miRNA can be used to at least partially inhibit or alter gene expression in plants. For instance, in some embodiments, a nucleotide sequence, which may encode a sequence substantially complementary to a gene to be inhibited or otherwise altered, may be prepared and inserted into a plant cell. Expression of the nucleotide sequence may cause the formation of precursor miRNA, which may, in turn, be cleaved (for example, with Dicer or other nucleases, including, for example, nucleases associated with RNA interference), to produce an miRNA sequence substantially complementary to the gene. The miRNA sequence may then interact with the gene (e.g., complementary binding) to inhibit the gene. In some cases, the nucleotide sequence may be an isolated nucleotide sequence.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 1, 2004Publication date: June 30, 2005Applicants: Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, William M. Rice UniversityInventors: Brenda Reinhart, Earl Weinstein, Matthew Rhoades, Bonnie Bartel, David Bartel
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Patent number: 6908496Abstract: A method for purifying a suspension containing colloid-seeded nanoparticles and excess colloids is provided that includes adding to the suspension a filter aid comprising a salt. The method further includes filtering the suspension with a filter of a pore size intermediate between the average colloid-seeded nanoparticle size and the average excess colloid size, so as to form a retentate that includes the majority of the colloid-seeded nanoparticles and a filtrate that includes the majority of the excess colloids. Still further, the method includes collecting the retentate. The method may be incorporated into a method of making metallized nanoparticles, such as nanoshells, by reduction of metal ions onto the purified colloid-seed nanoparticles so as to form the metallized nanoparticles.Type: GrantFiled: January 2, 2003Date of Patent: June 21, 2005Assignee: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Nancy J. Halas, Robert Kelley Bradley
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Publication number: 20050130324Abstract: The present invention provides nanoshell particles (“nanoshells”) for use in biosensing applications, along with their manner of making and methods of using the nanoshells for in vitro and in vivo detection of chemical and biological analytes, preferably by surface enhanced Raman light scattering. The preferred particles have a non-conducting core and a metal shell surrounding the core. For given core and shell materials, the ratio of the thickness (i.e., radius) of the core to the thickness of the metal shell is determinative of the wavelength of maximum absorbance of the particle. By controlling the relative core and shell thicknesses, biosensing metal nanoshells are fabricated which absorb light at any desired wavelength across the ultraviolet to infrared range of the electromagnetic spectrum. The surface of the particles are capable of inducing an enhanced SERS signal that is characteristic of an analyte of interest.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 27, 2004Publication date: June 16, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Jennifer West, Nancy Halas, Steven Oldenburg, Richard Averitt
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Publication number: 20050117155Abstract: Methods and apparatus for detecting photoacoustic signals in fluid media are described. The present invention differs from conventional photoacoustic spectroscopy in that rather than accumulating the absorbed energy in the fluid of a sample cell, the absorbed energy is accumulated in an acoustic detector or sensitive element. In a preferred embodiment, the acoustic detector comprises piezoelectric crystal quartz. The quartz is preferably in the shape of a tuning fork.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 10, 2003Publication date: June 2, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventor: Anatoliy Kosterev
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Patent number: 6899945Abstract: Buckyrock is a three-dimensional, solid block material comprising an entangled network of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNT), wherein the block comprises greater than 75 wt % SWNT. SWNT buckyrock is mechanically strong, tough and impact resistant. The single-wall carbon nanotubes in buckyrock form are present in a random network of individual single-wall carbon nanotubes, SWNT “ropes” and combinations thereof. The random network of the SWNT or SWNT ropes can be held in place by non-covalent “cross-links” between the nanotubes at nanotube contact points. In one embodiment, SWNT buckyrock is made by forming a SWNT-water slurry, slowly removing water from the slurry which results in a SWNT-water paste, and allowing the paste to dry very slowly, such that the SWNT network of the SWNT-water paste is preserved during solvent evaporation. Buckyrock can be used in applications, such as ballistic protection systems, involving light-weight material with mechanical strength, toughness and impact resistance.Type: GrantFiled: March 19, 2003Date of Patent: May 31, 2005Assignee: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Richard E. Smalley, Ramesh Sivarajan
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Publication number: 20050100497Abstract: This invention provides a method of making single-wall carbon nanotubes by laser vaporizing a mixture of carbon and one or more Group VIII transition metals. Single-wall carbon nanotubes preferentially form in the vapor and the one or more Group VIII transition metals catalyzed growth of the single-wall carbon nanotubes. In one embodiment of the invention, one or more single-wall carbon nanotubes are fixed in a high temperature zone so that the one or more Group VIII transition metals catalyze further growth of the single-wall carbon nanotube that is maintained in the high temperature zone. In another embodiment, two separate laser pulses are utilized with the second pulse timed to be absorbed by the vapor created by the first pulse.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 30, 2003Publication date: May 12, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Richard Smalley, Daniel Colbert, Ting Guo, Andrew Rinzler, Pavel Nikolaev, Andreas Thess
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Publication number: 20050089684Abstract: The present invention relates to coated fullerenes comprising a layer of at least one inorganic material covering at least a portion of at least one surface of a fullerene and methods for making. The present invention further relates to composites comprising the coated fullerenes of the present invention and further comprising polymers, ceramics and/or inorganic oxides. A coated fullerene interconnect device wherein at least two fullerenes are contacting each other to form a spontaneous interconnect is also disclosed as well as methods of making. In addition, dielectric films comprising the coated fullerenes of the present invention and methods of making are further disclosed.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 20, 2002Publication date: April 28, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Andrew Barron, Denis Flood, Elizabeth Whitsitt
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Patent number: 6884778Abstract: A new oligomer based on alternating fumaric acid and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) units is provided. The oligo(PEG fumarate) (OPF) may be functionalized by modification with a biocompatible organic group. Further, the OPF may be cross-linked using radical polymerization in the presence of either a chemical or photo initiator. A cross-linked OPF gel has a swelling behavior that is tunable dependent on the molecular weight of PEG. A cross-linkable PEG macromer, as exemplified by oligo(PEG fumarate), has unsaturated double bonds, for example in the fumaryl groups, along its macromolecular chain that allows for the preparation of hydrogels with tailored structure and properties.Type: GrantFiled: April 30, 2001Date of Patent: April 26, 2005Assignee: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: Seongbong Jo, Antonios G. Mikos
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Publication number: 20050074613Abstract: The invention incorporates new processes for the chemical modification of carbon nanotubes. Such processes involve the derivatization of multi- and single-wall carbon nanotubes, including small diameter (ca. 0.7 nm) single-wall carbon nanotubes, with diazonium species. The method allows the chemical attachment of a variety of organic compounds to the side and ends of carbon nanotubes. These chemically modified nanotubes have applications in polymer composite materials, molecular electronic applications, and-sensor devices. The methods of derivatization include electrochemical induced reactions, thermally induced reactions (via in-situ generation of diazonium compounds or pre-formed diazonium compounds), and photochemically induced reactions. The derivatization causes significant changes in the spectroscopic properties of the nanotubes. The estimated degree of functionality is ca. 1 out of every 20 to 30 carbons in a nanotube bearing a functionality moiety.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 1, 2003Publication date: April 7, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: James Tour, Jeffrey Bahr, Jiping Yang
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Publication number: 20050074390Abstract: The invention incorporates new processes for the chemical modification of carbon nanotubes. Such processes involve the derivatization of multi- and single-wall carbon nanotubes, including small diameter (ca. 0.7 nm) single-wall carbon nanotubes, with diazonium species. The method allows the chemical attachment of a variety of organic compounds to the side and ends of carbon nanotubes. These chemically modified nanotubes have applications in polymer composite materials, molecular electronic applications, and sensor devices. The methods of derivatization include electrochemical induced reactions, thermally induced reactions (via in-situ generation of diazonium compounds or pre-formed diazonium compounds), and photochemically induced reactions. The derivatization causes significant changes in the spectroscopic properties of the nanotubes. The estimated degree of functionality is ca. 1 out of every 20 to 30 carbons in a nanotube bearing a functionality moiety.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 1, 2003Publication date: April 7, 2005Applicant: William Marsh Rice UniversityInventors: James Tour, Jeffrey Bahr, Jiping Yang