Abrasive

Meller Optics Introduces High-Purity Microlux Optical Polishing Abrasives for Grinding, Lapping & Polishing all Materials

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

PROVIDENCE, R.I., Feb. 13, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Meller Optics, Inc. has introduced a line of high purity, petroleum-free alumina abrasive powders that are ready to mix with ionized water for use with all hard and soft optical materials.

Key Points: 
  • Capable of producing finishes to 10-5 scratch-dig, two ultrapure grades are offered: Microlux-R for aggressive grinding of hard materials and Microlux-RZ for ultra-fine polishing of soft materials.
  • Meller Microlux Powders come in seven particle sizes from 0.05 to 3.0 microns for mixing with ionized water and application directly to optics mounted on spot blocks.
  • Capable of producing finishes to 10-5 scratch-dig, two ultrapure grades are offered: Microlux-R for aggressive grinding of hard materials and Microlux-RZ for ultra-fine polishing of soft materials.
  • Meller Microlux-R Powders have large agglomerated particles for aggressive grinding and lapping that break down under pressure for final polishing and are 99.98% pure.

Revasum Inc and Asahi Diamond America, Inc Join Forces to Revolutionize Silicon Carbide Wafer Grinding

Retrieved on: 
Monday, January 15, 2024

The collaboration centers around the utilization of Revasum's industry-leading 7AF-HMG Silicon Carbide Grinder, a cutting-edge solution specifically designed for the unique challenges posed by 150mm and 200mm silicon carbide wafers.

Key Points: 
  • The collaboration centers around the utilization of Revasum's industry-leading 7AF-HMG Silicon Carbide Grinder, a cutting-edge solution specifically designed for the unique challenges posed by 150mm and 200mm silicon carbide wafers.
  • This collaboration brings together Revasum's expertise in semiconductor grinding and Asahi Diamond America's cutting-edge abrasive technology, marking a significant step forward in silicon carbide wafer manufacturing.
  • The 7AF-HMG Silicon Carbide Grinder is a groundbreaking solution that addresses the unique challenges of silicon carbide wafers, and this cooperation will propel the industry forward by improving efficiency and performance."
  • Koichi "Ken" Kikuchi, President of Asahi Diamond America, Inc, echoed this sentiment, saying, "Asahi Diamond America is thrilled to collaborate with Revasum Inc to elevate silicon carbide wafer grinding to new heights.

Revasum Inc and Asahi Diamond America, Inc Join Forces to Revolutionize Silicon Carbide Wafer Grinding

Retrieved on: 
Monday, January 15, 2024

The collaboration centers around the utilization of Revasum's industry-leading 7AF-HMG Silicon Carbide Grinder, a cutting-edge solution specifically designed for the unique challenges posed by 150mm and 200mm silicon carbide wafers.

Key Points: 
  • The collaboration centers around the utilization of Revasum's industry-leading 7AF-HMG Silicon Carbide Grinder, a cutting-edge solution specifically designed for the unique challenges posed by 150mm and 200mm silicon carbide wafers.
  • This collaboration brings together Revasum's expertise in semiconductor grinding and Asahi Diamond America's cutting-edge abrasive technology, marking a significant step forward in silicon carbide wafer manufacturing.
  • The 7AF-HMG Silicon Carbide Grinder is a groundbreaking solution that addresses the unique challenges of silicon carbide wafers, and this cooperation will propel the industry forward by improving efficiency and performance."
  • Koichi "Ken" Kikuchi, President of Asahi Diamond America, Inc, echoed this sentiment, saying, "Asahi Diamond America is thrilled to collaborate with Revasum Inc to elevate silicon carbide wafer grinding to new heights.

Diamond Foundry Creates World's First Diamond Wafer & Largest Diamond on Earth

Retrieved on: 
Monday, November 6, 2023

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 6, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Diamond Foundry Inc. ("DF") today announced that it has created the world's first (100mm) single-crystal diamond wafer.

Key Points: 
  • SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 6, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Diamond Foundry Inc. ("DF") today announced that it has created the world's first (100mm) single-crystal diamond wafer.
  • No wafer-sized diamond exists anywhere on Earth, so DF had to figure out how to create the "mother of all diamond wafers", then used to produce more.
  • Compared with natural resources on Earth, the Cullinan Diamond is the largest rough diamond ever mined on Earth yet with its largest dimension at 5.89cm, it is more than 4cm smaller than DF's diamond.
  • Diamond Foundry Inc. is the #1 producer of single-crystal diamond in the world, with a foundry in Washington State that is ten times larger than the next largest in the USA.

Bringing a shark to a knife fight: 7,000-year-old shark-tooth knives discovered in Indonesia

Retrieved on: 
Friday, October 27, 2023

Excavations on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi have uncovered two unique and deadly artefacts dating back some 7,000 years – tiger shark teeth that were used as blades.

Key Points: 
  • Excavations on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi have uncovered two unique and deadly artefacts dating back some 7,000 years – tiger shark teeth that were used as blades.
  • These finds, reported in the journal Antiquity, are some of the earliest archaeological evidence globally for the use of shark teeth in composite weapons – weapons made with multiple parts.


Our international team used a combination of scientific analysis, experimental reproduction and observations of recent human communities to determine that the two modified shark teeth had once been attached to handles as blades. They were most likely used in ritual or warfare.

7,000-year-old teeth

  • The two shark teeth were recovered during excavations as part of a joint Indonesian-Australian archaeological research program.
  • The shark teeth are of a similar size and came from tiger sharks (Galeocerda cuvier) that were approximately two metres long.
  • Microscopic examination of the teeth found they had once been tightly fixed to a handle using plant-based threads and a glue-like substance.


Examination of the edges of each tooth found they had been used to pierce, cut and scrape flesh and bone. However, far more damage was present than a shark would naturally accrue during feeding. While these residues superficially suggest Toalean people were using shark-tooth knives as everyday cutting implements, ethnographic (observations of recent communities), archaeological and experimental data suggest otherwise.

Why use shark teeth?

  • This fact, as well as the fact shark teeth can inflict deep lacerations, probably explains why shark-tooth blades were restricted to weapons for conflict and ritual activities in the present and recent past.
  • Read more:
    Evolution of a smile: 400 million year old spiny fish overturns shark theory of tooth origins

Shark-tooth blades in recent times


Numerous societies across the globe have integrated shark teeth into their material culture. In particular, peoples living on coastlines (and actively fishing for sharks) are more likely to incorporate greater numbers of teeth into a wider range of tools.

  • Observations of present-day communities indicate that, when not used to adorn the human body, shark teeth were almost universally used to create blades for conflict or ritual – including ritualised combat.
  • Shark teeth found in Maya and Mexican archaeological contexts are widely thought to have been used for ritualised bloodletting, and shark teeth are known to have been used as tattooing blades in Tonga, Aotearoa New Zealand, and Kiribati.

Other shark tooth archaeological finds

  • Indeed, modified shark teeth have been recovered from older contexts.
  • A solitary tiger shark tooth with a single perforation from Buang Merabak (New Ireland, Papua New Guinea) is dated to around 39,500–28,000 years ago.
  • Our newly described Indonesian shark tooth artefacts, with their combination of modifications and microscopic traces, instead indicate they were not only attached to knives, but very likely linked to ritual or conflict.
  • Michelle Langley is an Associate Professor of Archaeology in the Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution at Griffith University, Brisbane.
  • Basran Burhan is a PhD student at Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution at Griffith University, Brisbane.

Laser Photonics’ CleanTech Simplifies Corrosion Removal During Classic Car Restoration

Retrieved on: 
Friday, October 20, 2023

Laser Photonics Corporation , a leading global developer of industrial laser systems for laser cleaning and other material applications, highlights a key application for its CleanTech laser systems.

Key Points: 
  • Laser Photonics Corporation , a leading global developer of industrial laser systems for laser cleaning and other material applications, highlights a key application for its CleanTech laser systems.
  • “Professionals in the classic car restoration space greatly benefit from using our laser cleaning technology to solve unique challenges that traditional methods are often unable to meet,” said Wayne Tupuola, CEO of Laser Photonics.“Our technology is eco-friendly, cost effective and time efficient.
  • Laser cleaning uses a high-powered laser beam to remove dirt, rust, corrosion, mold and other contaminants from surfaces without damaging the underlying material.
  • The CleanTech Laser Blasting Technology manufactured by Laser Photonics is eco-friendly, cost-effective and time-efficient.

14-year-old named America's Top Young Scientist for development of skin cancer treatment

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, October 11, 2023

ST. PAUL, Minn. and CHARLOTTE, N.C., Oct. 11, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- 3M (@3M) and Discovery Education (@DiscoveryEd) named Heman Bekele, a 9th grader at W.T. Woodson High School in Annandale, Va., the winner of the 2023 3M Young Scientist Challenge, the nation's premier middle school science competition. Heman set himself apart with his compound-based Skin Cancer Treating Soap (SCTS). As the grand prize winner, he will receive a $25,000 cash prize and the prestigious title of "America's Top Young Scientist."

Key Points: 
  • Woodson High School in Annandale, Va., the winner of the 2023 3M Young Scientist Challenge , the nation's premier middle school science competition.
  • As the grand prize winner, he will receive a $25,000 cash prize and the prestigious title of "America's Top Young Scientist."
  • Skin cancer is the most common cancer in the United States, with an average annual treatment cost of $8.1 billion.
  • To learn more about the 3M Young Scientist Challenge and meet this year's winners and finalists, visit youngscientistlab.com .

Stone Age herders transported heavy rock tools to grind animal bones, plants and pigment

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, October 4, 2023

About 7,000 years ago, a small group of people sat around a fire, next to a small lake in what is now the Nefud Desert of northern Saudi Arabia. We found some of the tools they left behind – and on close inspection of the tools, we discovered these Stone Age herders were busy grinding animal bones, wild plants and pigments while their meat was cooking. Our results are published in a new paper in PLOS ONE.Herders and artistsHerders lived around these lakes and led their cattle, sheep and goats to the best pastures.

Key Points: 


About 7,000 years ago, a small group of people sat around a fire, next to a small lake in what is now the Nefud Desert of northern Saudi Arabia. We found some of the tools they left behind – and on close inspection of the tools, we discovered these Stone Age herders were busy grinding animal bones, wild plants and pigments while their meat was cooking. Our results are published in a new paper in PLOS ONE.

Herders and artists

    • Herders lived around these lakes and led their cattle, sheep and goats to the best pastures.
    • These Stone Age herders were also skilled artists.

Stone Age camp sites

    • Archaeological sites from this period consist of collections of small fireplaces.
    • The herders seem to have been extremely mobile, moving around the landscape with their herds, searching for pasture and water.
    • There are no plant remains in the archaeological sites, and animal bones only survive in small fragments.
    • So, we turned to microscopic analysis in order to help determine the function of the grinding tools.

Microscopic traces

    • In experiments we find that grinding different materials, such as bone, pigment, or plants, leaves distinctive microscopic marks on the surface of the grinding tools.
    • These marks, including striations, fractures, rounding of individual quartz grains and different types of polish, can be seen with a microscope.
    • We looked at the Stone Age grinding tools to identify similar traces, and from them to determine what materials were ground.
    • Our microscopic study showed the grindstones were used for a range of different purposes.

Valuable tools

    • Our analysis of the grinding marks also showed the tools were often used for different materials over time.
    • They were clearly valuable and used as much as possible.
    • We’re still not sure why the discarded tools were placed on the fire – perhaps they used them to cook or to dry their meat.

Innovations in Abrasives: AI and Automation Revolutionize Surface Treatment in Key Industries - ResearchAndMarkets.com

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Abrasives, mineral-based materials, play a crucial role in polishing, grinding, and cleaning surfaces across various industries.

Key Points: 
  • Abrasives, mineral-based materials, play a crucial role in polishing, grinding, and cleaning surfaces across various industries.
  • The demand for abrasives is strongly driven by key user industries such as automotive, metals, construction, railways, aerospace, fabrication, and general engineering.
  • Growth in Electronics and Industrial Sectors: The expanding electronics and industrial sectors will contribute to market growth.
  • Asia Pacific dominated the market in 2022, driven by significant growth in the automotive, manufacturing, and metal fabrication industries.

Dremel® Partners with Scrub Daddy® to Create an Enhanced Cleaning Tool and Accessories Line to Help Users Tackle Cleaning Projects with Ease

Retrieved on: 
Monday, October 2, 2023

MT. PROSPECT, Ill., Oct. 2, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Dremel announced its partnership with Scrub Daddy, the viral expert in sponge technology, to launch the Dremel Cordless Versa Scrub Daddy Power Scrubber Tool Kit and accessories, bringing ease and efficiency to a variety of cleaning tasks.

Key Points: 
  • "Combining a powerful motor from Dremel with strong Scrub Daddy pad technology, users can now clean efficiently and get back to spending time on the projects they love."
  • Backed by 2,200 RPM of power, the Versa can tackle a variety of heavy-duty cleaning needs in a matter of seconds.
  • The PC10-07 Dremel Versa Scrub Daddy power tool kit includes the Dremel Versa cordless scrubbing tool and five Scrub Daddy accessories and the PC360-5 Dremel Versa Scrub Daddy accessory kit which includes five Scrub Daddy accessories.
  • Dremel PC10-07 Versa Scrub Daddy power tool kit at a Glance: