The Electronics and Specialty Gases business of Linde North America recently commissioned a new carbon dioxide (CO2) purification unit at its electronics gases facility in Medford, Oregon.
The production unit was desi...
Electronic components distributor Digi-Key Corporation, recognized by design engineers as having the industry’s broadest selection of electronic components available for immediate shipment, today announced it has stock on Murata Electronics’ ECAS series of polymer aluminum electrolytic capacitors.
Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in using new "metamaterials" for radical advances in optical technologies, including ultra-powerful microscopes and computers and a possible invisibility cloak.
Thin layers of oxide materials and their interfaces have been observed in atomic resolution during growth for the first time by researchers at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, providing new insight into the complicated link between their structure and properties.
Quickparts one of North America's largest providers of custom designed parts, ranging from rapid prototyping to plastic injection molding, recently announced the availability of Somos NeXt, an extremely durable stereolithography material for rapid prototyping.
IBC Advanced Alloys Corp. announces that it has signed a binding letter agreement (the "Agreement") with Hydrogen Link Inc. ("HL") to advance HL's leading edge and proprietary lithium beryllium hydrides technologies for hydrogen storage and fuel cell applications.
MarketResearch.com has announced the addition of MarketsandMarkets's new report "Advanced Phase Change Materials (PCM) Market: Global Forecast (2010-2015)," to their collection of Construction market reports. For more in...
Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/656c8b/global_multilayere) has announced the addition of the "Global Multilayered Ceramic Chip Capacitor Market 2009 2013" report to their offering.
Mu...
Like an ice cube on a warm day, most materials melt — that is, change from a solid to a liquid state — as they get warmer. But a few oddball materials do the reverse: They melt as they get cooler. Now a team of researchers at MIT has found that silicon, the most widely used material for computer chips and solar cells, can exhibit this strange property of “retrograde melting” when it contains high concentrations of certain metals dissolved in it.
Vishay Intertechnology, Inc. today announced that its high-temperature 140 CRH and low-impedance 150 CRZ series of surface-mount aluminum capacitors have been extended with new devices that meet the rigorous IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020 soldering guidelines for severe reflow conditions.
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