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Results 6691 - 6700 of 7148 for Electronics
  • Article - 5 May 2017
    A new contact lens based system has been developed that can monitor glucose levels in tears. The system can also be used to detect the emergence of glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness.
  • News - 17 Jul 2007
    August 6-8, 2007, Austin, Texas Nanotechnology is certainly more than a buzz word these days. It is a broad field encompassing many disciplines and areas of research and application. The 2007...
  • Article - 13 Apr 2017
    Phosphorene is a single layer of black phosphorous – just as graphene is a single layer of graphite. And just as graphene, phosphorene is a similarly exciting 2D material with many remarkable...
  • Article - 11 Apr 2017
    Nanomaterials are finding a wide variety of applications including next generation computer chips, improved insulating materials, LED displays, high energy density batteries, high power magnets, high...
  • Article - 6 Apr 2017
    Like a bullet train speeding down the track, electrons whizz through graphene at velocities approaching the speed of light. This makes the material a promising successor to silicon in electronic and...
  • Article - 4 Apr 2017
    Scientists at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) Center for Nanophase Material Sciences in collaboration with North Carolina State University have developed GNRs without the use of metal...
  • Article - 4 Apr 2017
    Researchers from both University of Vermont and University of Pittsburgh recently discovered a super strong and stretchable silver, which can potentially open-up new possibilities for the development...
  • Article - 8 Mar 2017
    This article looks at analyzing novel nanomaterials, using spectral analysis to characterize silicene.
  • Article - 17 Feb 2017
    Researchers at Rice University’s Department of Chemistry have developed three-dimensional rebar graphene foam (3D rebar GF). The research group used multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) to reinforce...
  • News - 3 Jul 2007
    Imagine a mechanical Pelé or David Beckham six times smaller than an amoeba playing with a “soccer ball” no wider than a human hair on a field that can fit on a grain of rice. Purely...

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