Materials Research Building Opens

<p>Florida State President T.K. Wetherell officially opened the university's new, 45,000-square-foot Materials Research Building during a ceremony on Florida State's Southwest Campus in Tallahassee. With the opening of the building, The Florida State University is prepared to vault to the very top of the list of American universities conducting state-of-the-art research on cost-efficient, high-performance composite materials.</p>

<p>"This building affords us research opportunities that most other universities simply don't have," said Kirby Kemper, Florida State's vice president for Research. "I anticipate that the work done here in the coming years will lead others to acknowledge The Florida State University as one of the nation's best research centers in advanced composites. This truly marks the beginning of the next generation of lightweight, high-performance composite materials."</p>

<p>The $20 million building is a two-story facility that houses 13 laboratories for the design, processing and characterization of advanced materials and systems. It will be home to Florida State's High-Performance Materials Institute, a world-class research center that has emerged as a leader in the development of "buckypaper," a film made with carbon nanotubes, which are incredibly lightweight but capable of making a composite material that is amazingly strong. Buckypaper also has other exceptional properties, such as electrical and thermal conductivity.</p>

<p>While currently difficult to produce in large amounts, buckypaper holds tremendous potential for use in a wide variety of applications. Among them, it could be used to illuminate computer and television screens in a more uniform and energy-efficient manner; allow for the development of heat sinks that would allow computers and other electronic equipment to disperse heat more efficiently, which in turn could lead to even greater advances in electronic miniaturization; shield computers and aircraft from electromagnetic interference; and offer lightning-strike protection to structures such as airplanes or large windmill blades.</p>

<p>For the rest, see: Florida</a> State University</p>