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Results 51 - 60 of 490 for Silicon nanowires
  • Supplier Profile
    By 1970 the semiconductor industry had been building momentum for at least a decade. Yet the companies supplying the equipment and materials that made possible the miniature wonders known as...
  • News - 11 Nov 2009
    Silicon nanowires are attracting significant attention from the electronics industry due to the drive for ever-smaller electronic devices, from cell phones to computers. The operation of these future...
  • Supplier Profile
    BESS Technologies has expertise in the design of nanostructures to create high-performing components for lithium ion batteries. The benefits of BESS Tech's battery technology...
  • Supplier Profile
    The Mellon College of Science (MCS) consists of the Departments of Biological Sciences, Chemistry, Mathematical Sciences, and Physics and serves as home to a number of interdisciplinary research...
  • Supplier Profile
    Graphenea is a leading graphene producer for industrial and research needs. Graphenea has developed a leading synthesis and transfer process to obtain high uniformity monolayer graphene films on any...
  • Supplier Profile
    Meliorum Technologies is a privately held company which manufactures a broad range of cutting edge nanomaterials and nanomaterial-based application precursors to satisfy the stringent technical...
  • Article - 27 Aug 2005
    Nanostructures, with their quantum properties, can be used in many industries, especially the electronics and energy sectors. The classification, composition and properties of inorganic nanostructures...
  • Article - 7 May 2004
    For the last few years scientists at the Nanometer Consortium at Lund University have been able to make nanowires. Now they have managed to produce “nanotrees”. Posted May 5 2004
  • Article - 19 Nov 2003
    Physicists have discovered a mechanism that forces sharp edges on the surface of a silicon crystal to become rounded. This may be exploited to make nanowires and quantum dots. Posted September 15 2003
  • News - 24 Sep 2010
    Computers, light bulbs, and even people generate heat—energy that ends up being wasted. With a thermoelectric device, which converts heat to electricity and vice versa, you can harness that...

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