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Tag: transistors

Practical Nanotube Electronics

Researchers develop a new method for making efficient nanotube transistor arrays.

Biodegradable Transistors

Electronics that break down in the body could be useful in temporary medical implants and drug delivery.

Implantable Silicon-Silk Electronics

Biodegradable circuits could enable better neural interfaces and LED tattoos.

Detecting Light with Graphene

The atom-thick carbon material could have optoelectronic applications.

Faster Printable Circuits

A new polymer simplifies organic circuits.

Nanowires That Behave Like Cells

Transistors with lipid membranes could make better interfaces for neural prosthetics.

A Full-Color Screen That Bends

A new way to mass-produce flexible OLED displays could mean affordable commercial products.

Unzipping Graphene's Potential

Slicing open carbon nanotubes could lead to much faster electronic components.

Thermometer Created for Nanotubes

Understanding how nanotubes heat up could make them useful for electronics.

Electronic Inks from Carbon Nanotubes

Researchers have solved one of the fundamental problems in making electronics from nanotubes.

The Year in Materials

Stretchable electronics and the strongest material ever were just two achievements of 2008.

Moore's Law

The computer chip has evolved from a simple integrated circuit to a microprocessor with millions of transistors.

Faster Graphene Transistors

Graphene circuits could lead to high-speed wireless devices and advanced weapons detectors.

Strongest Material Ever Tested

Graphene, praised for its electrical properties, has been proven the strongest known material.

Quantum Leap

Researchers have controlled the position of a single electron in a silicon circuit.

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