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Results 1411 - 1420 of 1614 for Electrical conductivity
  • Article - 2 Aug 2017
    While graphene is the thinnest and strongest material known to man, its lack of a natural bandgap prevents it from being used for important transistor and optoelectronic devices.
  • News - 24 Jul 2007
    A key discovery at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute could help advance the role of graphene as a possible heir to copper and silicon in nanoelectronics. Graphene, a one-atom-thick sheet of carbon,...
  • Article - 5 May 2017
    Chromium-based Cr2AlC MAX materials exhibit nanometre-scale 3D defects, crucial for self-healing properties and mechanical strength.
  • 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...
  • Article - 15 Jul 2015
    The wider use of nanomaterials has increased their release into the environment including soil, water, and air, which may lead to unintended contamination of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
  • Article - 13 Aug 2014
    Accurate material screening of mechanical properties and high throughput process are imperative for rapid production of single- and multi-layer coatings.
  • Article - 17 Jul 2014
    Researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) have developed a new way of using graphene ribbons to fine tune the wonder material causing it to act like a semiconductor.
  • News - 6 Mar 2007
    Researchers from MIT, Georgia Institute of Technology and Ohio State University have developed a new computer modeling approach to study how materials behave under stress at the atomic level, offering...
  • Article - 16 Sep 2014
    Nanowires have a number of exciting properties which are not exhibited by 3-D or bulk materials. This is due to the fact that electrons within the nanowires are quantum confined and have energy levels...
  • Article - 16 Oct 2013
    The next generation of energy storage has been developed using graphene to create supercapacitors that could be used for renewable energy storage.

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