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Results 91 - 100 of 165 for Computer parts
  • Article - 4 Jan 2019
    In this article the topic of 4d printing is discussed, what it is and how it is applied in different application fields
  • Article - 7 Sep 2018
    To keep pace with the constant miniaturization of computer chips, transistors must have increasingly smaller features. however silicon begins to run out of steam at around five nanometers. A nanoscale...
  • Article - 2 Jul 2018
    Nano technology and climate change, both hot topics and of much debate in many forums, but how can nanotechnology have an impact to reduce the effects of climate change, in this article we discuss...
  • Article - 10 May 2018
    The origin of the field of nanotechnology to a famous lecture given by visionary physicist Richard Feynman back in 1959, entitled “There’s Plenty of Room At The Bottom,” – although at the time, the...
  • Article - 5 Sep 2017
    Guiding cell cultures by engineering their extracellular environment is an area which has gathered a lot of attention because of its potential to repair, maintain and develop tissues and organs.
  • Article - 10 Aug 2017
    A tiny terahertz laser which could be used in imaging and chemical detection has been selected by NASA to provide terahertz emission for the Galactic/ExtraGalactic ULDB Spectroscopic Terahertz...
  • Article - 24 Apr 2017
    Researchers from Temple University and Argonne National Lab have discovered an imaging method based on combined X-ray scattering and computer simulations that turns the dream into reality.
  • Article - 1 Jun 2016
    For decades, we relied on silicon as the semiconductor for our computer chips. But now, working at nanometer scales, it looks like physical limitations may end the current methods to include more and...
  • Article - 16 Jul 2015
    Dr. Andrew Pollard, Graphene Research Scientist at NPL, talks to AZoNano about the characterisation and standardisation of graphene and other 2D materials.
  • Article - 13 Dec 2013
    A material made up of tin atoms arranged in a single layer could be the world’s first electrical conductor with 100% efficiency, which would make it more conductive than graphene.

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