Skip to main content

Home/ NMDHS Marauders/ Group items tagged nanotechnology

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Johnathan Fletcher

PhysOrg.com - Science News, Technology, Physics, Nanotechnology, Space Science, Earth S... - 0 views

  •  
    PhysOrg.com™ is a leading web-based science, research and technology news service which covers a full range of topics. These include physics, earth science, medicine, nanotechnology, electronics, space, biology, chemistry, computer sciences, engineering, mathematics and other sciences and technologies. Launched in 2004, PhysOrg's readership has grown steadily to include 1.75 million scientists, researchers, and engineers every month. PhysOrg publishes approximately 100 quality articles every day, offering some of the most comprehensive coverage of sci-tech developments world-wide. Quancast 2009 includes PhysOrg in its list of the Global Top 2,000 Websites. PhysOrg community members enjoy access to many personalized features such as social networking, a personal home page set-up, RSS/XML feeds, article comments and ranking, the ability to save favourite articles, a daily newsletter, and other options.
Johnathan Fletcher

Breakthrough in developing super-material graphene - 0 views

  •  
    "A collaborative research project has brought the world a step closer to producing a new material on which future nanotechnology could be based. Researchers across Europe, including the UK's National Physical Laboratory (NPL), have demonstrated how an incredible material, graphene, could hold the key to the future of high-speed electronics, such as micro-chips and touchscreen technology."
Johnathan Fletcher

Engineers achieve world record with high-speed graphene transistors - 0 views

  •  
    "Graphene, a one-atom-thick layer of graphitic carbon, has great potential to make electronic devices such as radios, computers and phones faster and smaller. But its unique properties have also led to difficulties in integrating the material into such devices."
Johnathan Fletcher

Graphene transistor hits 300GHz | bit-tech.net - 0 views

  •  
    "Graphene - a clean, safe future alternative to silicon in CPUs - has been used to make a transistor which runs at a whopping 300GHz."
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page