High-speed low-power printed transistors could lead to new display technologies.
Nanotechnology News from Nanowerk
High-speed low-power printed transistors could lead to new display technologies. • Email to a friend • Researchers conduct experiments to demonstrate inertial motion in magnetic materials. • Email to a friend • A team of electrical engineers, computer scientists and biomedical engineers has created a new lab-on-a-chip that can help study tumor heterogeneity to reduce resistance to cancer therapies. • Email to a friend • Researchers succeeded for the first time in growing 2D materials directly on optical fibers. • Email to a friend • Engineers have invented a way to spray extremely thin wires made of a plant-based material that could be used in N95 mask filters, devices that harvest energy for electricity, and potentially the creation of human organs. • Email to a friend • Similar to batteries, supercapacitors are suitable for the repeated storage of electrical energy. Researchers now present a particularly safe and sustainable variant of such a supercapacitor. • Email to a friend • By bringing the sources of molybdenum and sulphur near the surface of gallium liquid metal, researchers were able to realize chemical reactions that form the molybdenum sulphur bonds to establish very large-scale two-dimensiona MoS2. • Email to a friend • Researchers have discovered a revolutionary and cheap way to make filters that can turn water contaminated with heavy metals into safe drinking water in a matter of minutes. • Email to a friend • |
|