An international team of researchers has developed a new light-based manipulation method that could one day be used to mass produce electronic components for smartphones, computers and other devices.
Researchers have demonstrated a new technique for self-assembling electronic devices. The proof-of-concept work was used to create diodes and transistors, and paves the way for self-assembling more ...
SRC Technologies won a $1 million grant to create a new assembly line, bringing advanced electronics manufacturing closer to ...
A remarkable proof-of-concept project has successfully manufactured nanoscale diodes and transistors using a fast, cheap new production technique in which liquid metal is directed to self-assemble ...
The World Economic Forum (WEF) has named Siemens’ electronics assembly plant here to its Global Lighthouse Network of the ...
(Nanowerk News) First place in an EU competitive call on “Unconventional Computing” was awarded to a collaborative proposal coordinated by Prof. John McCaskill from the RUB Faculty of Chemistry and ...
Chemistry isn't necessarily the most photogenic of disciplines, but 10 years ago, George M. Whitesides' group at Harvard University grabbed the chemical community's attention with a picture of a ...
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A self-assembling shortcut to better organic solar cells
Osaka Metropolitan University scientists have created a molecule that naturally forms p/n junctions, structures that are ...
In a study published in Materials Horizons, researchers at North Carolina State University developed a new method for self-assembling electronic devices. The proof-of-concept work produced diodes and ...
When it comes to producing cheaper components, let there be light! Fortunately, an international team of researchers developed a light-based manipulation method that could be used to mass-produce ...
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