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Results 81 - 90 of 280 for Thermoelectrics
  • News - 24 Nov 2010
    Researchers are creating a system that harvests heat from an engine's exhaust to generate electricity, reducing a car's fuel consumption. The effort is funded with a $1.4 million,...
  • News - 15 May 2007
    Gang Chen's research with nano-scale materials gave him a head start in the field of nanotechnology when it was still brand new. Today, nano-materials, in which dimensions are measured in...
  • Supplier Profile
    Oven Industries, Inc., founded in 1964, has pioneered in the development of custom industrial temperature controllers and sensors, designed by experts in this field. Initially, we produced precise...
  • Supplier Profile
    US Research Nanomaterials, Inc. is the world leading carbon nanotube producer and provider. This high-tech enterprise focuses on research and development of nanotechnology and supplies metal...
  • Supplier Profile
    EPRUI Nanoparticles & Microspheres Co. Ltd is a high-tech enterprise focusing on research and development of nanomaterials and microspheres products. We have cooperated closely with well-known...
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    Reinste Nano Ventures emphases the significance of purest Nanomaterials with uniform composition free from any adulterants for class research and production purposes. In Reinste Nano ventures we...
  • News - 25 Jul 2008
    Researchers have invented a new material that will make cars even more efficient, by converting heat wasted through engine exhaust into electricity. In the current issue of the journal Science, they...
  • News - 10 Feb 2022
    In a study published in the journal Results in Materials, graphene nanosheets (GNs) produced from waste plastics were synthesized for cost-efficient thermoelectric (TE)...
  • News - 4 Jun 2018
    According to a new study from the University of Warwick, waste heat can be changed to electricity more efficiently using one-dimensional atomically thin nanowires. Nanowires as thin as atoms...
  • News - 1 Jun 2015
    Imagine a fabric that will keep your body at a comfortable temperature--regardless of how hot or cold it actually is. That's the goal of an engineering project at the University of California, San...

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