Table of contents
April 2004, Volume 3 No 4 pp197-274
About the coverEditorial
US nanotech restructures - p197
doi:10.1038/nmat1111
Full Text - US nanotech restructures | PDF (141 KB) - US nanotech restructures
Commentary
Materials recycling and industrial ecology - pp199 - 201
Jonathan Linton and Julian Scott Yeomans
doi:10.1038/nmat1101
Full Text - Materials recycling and industrial ecology | PDF (258 KB) - Materials recycling and industrial ecology
Research News
From stretchable electronics to active plasmonics - p202
doi:10.1038/nmat1112
Full Text - From stretchable electronics to active plasmonics | PDF (207 KB) - From stretchable electronics to active plasmonics
News and Views
Magnetic semiconductors: Silicon-based spintronics - pp203 - 204
Steve Pearton
doi:10.1038/nmat1102
Full Text - Magnetic semiconductorsSilicon-based spintronics | PDF (316 KB) - Magnetic semiconductorsSilicon-based spintronics
Solid-state chemistry: Russian-doll fuller oxides - pp205 - 206
Gérard Férey
doi:10.1038/nmat1098
Full Text - Solid-state chemistryRussian-doll fuller oxides | PDF (279 KB) - Solid-state chemistryRussian-doll fuller oxides
Nanotechnology: The third way - pp207 - 209
Neil Mathur and Peter Littlewood
doi:10.1038/nmat1108
Full Text - NanotechnologyThe third way | PDF (465 KB) - NanotechnologyThe third way
Biomimetic polymers: Tough and smart - pp209 - 210
Richard A. L. Jones
doi:10.1038/nmat1109
Full Text - Biomimetic polymersTough and smart | PDF (362 KB) - Biomimetic polymersTough and smart
Material witness: A tangled history - p210
Philip Ball
doi:10.1038/nmat1104
Full Text - Material witnessA tangled history | PDF (73 KB) - Material witnessA tangled history
Review
Enhancement of nonlinear effects using photonic crystals - pp211 - 219
Marin Solja
i
and
J. D. Joannopoulos
doi:10.1038/nmat1097
Abstract - Enhancement of nonlinear effects using photonic crystals | Full Text - Enhancement of nonlinear effects using photonic crystals | PDF (1,165 KB) - Enhancement of nonlinear effects using photonic crystals
Subject Category: Optical, photonic and optoelectronic materials
Letters
Anomalous Hall effect governed by electron doping in a room-temperature transparent ferromagnetic semiconductor - pp221 - 224
Hidemi Toyosaki, Tomoteru Fukumura, Yasuhiro Yamada, Kiyomi Nakajima, Toyohiro Chikyow, Tetsuya Hasegawa, Hideomi Koinuma and Masashi Kawasaki
doi:10.1038/nmat1099
First paragraph - Anomalous Hall effect governed by electron doping in a room-temperature transparent ferromagnetic semiconductor | Full Text - Anomalous Hall effect governed by electron doping in a room-temperature transparent ferromagnetic semiconductor | PDF (357 KB) - Anomalous Hall effect governed by electron doping in a room-temperature transparent ferromagnetic semiconductor | Supplementary information
Subject Categories: Electronic materials | Semiconductors | Magnetic materials
Oxidation of plutonium dioxide - pp225 - 228
Pavel A. Korzhavyi, Levente Vitos, David A. Andersson and Börje Johansson
doi:10.1038/nmat1095
First paragraph - Oxidation of plutonium dioxide | Full Text - Oxidation of plutonium dioxide | PDF (120 KB) - Oxidation of plutonium dioxide | Supplementary information
Subject Categories: Materials for energy | Computation, modelling and theory
Steering molecular organization and host–guest interactions using two-dimensional nanoporous coordination systems - pp229 - 233
Sebastian Stepanow, Magalí Lingenfelder, Alexandre Dmitriev, Hannes Spillmann, Erik Delvigne, Nian Lin, Xiaobin Deng, Chengzhi Cai, Johannes V. Barth and Klaus Kern
doi:10.1038/nmat1088
First paragraph - Steering molecular organization and host-guest interactions using two-dimensional nanoporous coordination systems | Full Text - Steering molecular organization and host–guest interactions using two-dimensional nanoporous coordination systems | PDF (946 KB) - Steering molecular organization and host–guest interactions using two-dimensional nanoporous coordination systems
Subject Categories: Porous materials | Surface and thin films
Chemically feasible hypothetical crystalline networks - pp234 - 238
Martin D. Foster, Alexandra Simperler, Robert G. Bell, Olaf Delgado Friedrichs, Filipe A. Almeida Paz and Jacek Klinowski
doi:10.1038/nmat1090
First paragraph - Chemically feasible hypothetical crystalline networks | Full Text - Chemically feasible hypothetical crystalline networks | PDF (714 KB) - Chemically feasible hypothetical crystalline networks | Supplementary information
Subject Categories: Porous materials | Computation, modelling and theory
Sequential switch of biomineral crystal morphology using trivalent ions - pp239 - 243
Lara A. Touryan, Michael J. Lochhead, Brian J. Marquardt and Viola Vogel
doi:10.1038/nmat1096
First paragraph - Sequential switch of biomineral crystal morphology using trivalent ions | Full Text - Sequential switch of biomineral crystal morphology using trivalent ions | PDF (561 KB) - Sequential switch of biomineral crystal morphology using trivalent ions | Supplementary information
Subject Categories: Ceramics | Nanoscale materials | Surface and thin films | Design synthesis and processing
Stimuli-responsive polypeptide vesicles by conformation-specific assembly - pp244 - 248
Enrico G. Bellomo, Michael D. Wyrsta, Lisa Pakstis, Darrin J. Pochan and Timothy J. Deming
doi:10.1038/nmat1093
First paragraph - Stimuli-responsive polypeptide vesicles by conformation-specific assembly | Full Text - Stimuli-responsive polypeptide vesicles by conformation-specific assembly | PDF (436 KB) - Stimuli-responsive polypeptide vesicles by conformation-specific assembly | Supplementary information
Subject Categories: Polymers | Biomedical materials | Design synthesis and processing
A photolabile hydrogel for guided three-dimensional cell growth and migration - pp249 - 253
Ying Luo and Molly S. Shoichet
doi:10.1038/nmat1092
First paragraph - A photolabile hydrogel for guided three-dimensional cell growth and migration | Full Text - A photolabile hydrogel for guided three-dimensional cell growth and migration | PDF (266 KB) - A photolabile hydrogel for guided three-dimensional cell growth and migration | Supplementary information
Subject Categories: Biomedical materials | Design synthesis and processing
Articles
Large anomalous Hall effect in a silicon-based magnetic semiconductor - pp255 - 262
Ncholu Manyala, Yvan Sidis, John F. DiTusa, Gabriel Aeppli, David P. Young and Zachary Fisk
doi:10.1038/nmat1103
Abstract - Large anomalous Hall effect in a silicon-based magnetic semiconductor | Full Text - Large anomalous Hall effect in a silicon-based magnetic semiconductor | PDF (607 KB) - Large anomalous Hall effect in a silicon-based magnetic semiconductor
Subject Categories: Semiconductors | Magnetic materials
Collective behaviour in two-dimensional cobalt nanoparticle assemblies observed by magnetic force microscopy - pp263 - 268
Victor F. Puntes, Pau Gorostiza, Deborah M. Aruguete, Neus G. Bastus and A. Paul Alivisatos
doi:10.1038/nmat1094
Abstract - Collective behaviour in two-dimensional cobalt nanoparticle assemblies observed by magnetic force microscopy | Full Text - Collective behaviour in two-dimensional cobalt nanoparticle assemblies observed by magnetic force microscopy | PDF (528 KB) - Collective behaviour in two-dimensional cobalt nanoparticle assemblies observed by magnetic force microscopy
Subject Categories: Magnetic materials | Nanoscale materials
The route to fullerenoid oxides - pp269 - 273
Maryvonne Hervieu, Benjamin Mellène, Richard Retoux, Sophie Boudin and Bernard Raveau
doi:10.1038/nmat1089
Abstract - The route to fullerenoid oxides | Full Text - The route to fullerenoid oxides | PDF (1,544 KB) - The route to fullerenoid oxides
Subject Categories: Design synthesis and processing | Characterisation and analytical techniques
Erratum
Dopants adsorbed as single atoms prevent degradation of catalysts - p274
Sanwu Wang, Albina Y. Borisevich, Sergey N. Rashkeev, Michael V. Glazoff, Karl Sohlberg, Stephen J. Pennycook and Sokrates T. Pantelides
doi:10.1038/nmat1100
Full Text - Dopants adsorbed as single atoms prevent degradation of catalysts | PDF (49 KB) - Dopants adsorbed as single atoms prevent degradation of catalysts

