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Coffee stains inspire optimal printing technique for electronics
News 179Days Ago (11-14)Now, after studying this process for years, a team of researchers have created a new family of inks that overcomes this problem, enabling the fabrication of new electronics such as sensors, light detectors, batteries and solar cells. Coffee... -
A remote control for neurons
News 219Days Ago (10-05)Graphene is abundant, cheap, and biocompatible. Cohen-Karni's lab has been working with graphene for several years, developing a technique of synthesizing the material in 3D topologies that he's labeled "fuzzy" graphene. By growing two-dime... -
Promising new research identifies novel approach for controlling defects in 3D printing
News 226Days Ago (09-29)A new paper in the journal Additive Manufacturing points to a possible breakthrough solution: Use temperature data at the time of production to predict the formation of subsurface defects so they can be addressed right then and there. A tea... -
Atomically thin magnets for next generation spin and quantum electronics
News 296Days Ago (07-20)As our smartphones, laptops, and computers get smaller and faster, so do the transistors inside them that control the flow of electricity and store information. But traditional transistors can only shrink so much. Now, researchers at Steven... -
Pretty as a peacock: The gemstone for the next generation of smart sensors
News 300Days Ago (07-17)An international team of scientists, led by the Universities of Surrey and Sussex, has developed colour-changing, flexible photonic crystals that could be used to develop sensors that warn when an earthquake might strike next. The wearable,... -
Scientists create new recipe for single-atom transistors
News 319Days Ago (06-27)Now, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and their colleagues at the University of Maryland have developed a step-by-step recipe to produce the atomic-scale devices. Using these instructions, the NIST-le...
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