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Results 2551 - 2560 of 2573 for Photovoltaics
  • Article - 14 Aug 2013
    Indium gallium aluminum nitride is generally prepared by epitaxial methods like pulsed-laser deposition, molecular beam epitaxy, etc. Addition of indium to the gallium nitride to form the...
  • Article - 16 Aug 2013
    Aluminium gallium indium phosphide is a semiconductor material that provides a platform for the development of novel multi-junction photovoltaics and optoelectronic devices as it span a direct bandgap...
  • Article - 22 Aug 2013
    Copper zinc tin sulfide is a quaternary semiconducting compound that has favorable optical and electronic properties similar to copper indium gallium selenide. It can be obtained from chalcopyrite...
  • Article - 22 Aug 2013
    Copper indium gallide selenide is an I-III-VI semicondutor material composed of selenium, gallium, indium and copper. It is a tetrahedrally bonded semiconductor largely found in chalcopyrite mineral.
  • Article - 16 Aug 2013
    Tin dioxide is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula SnO2. It mainly occurs in the mineral, cassiterite. It is a colorless, amphoteric and diamagnetic solid that is usually considered as an...
  • Article - 21 Aug 2013
    Gallium selenide is a chemical compound having a hexagonal layer structure similar to that of gallium sulfide. It readily reacts with acids. Gallium selenide crystals are widely being used in...
  • Article - 23 Aug 2013
    Copper (I) oxide or cuprous oxide is an inorganic compound having the formula Cu2O. It is a principal oxide of copper. It is a red-colored solid, which is a component of certain antifouling paints....
  • Article - 11 Apr 2013
    Cadmium telluride is a crystalline compound formed from cadmium and tellurium. It is sandwiched with calcium sulfide to form a p-n junction photovoltaic solar cell.
  • Article - 3 May 2013
    Electronic devices are ever present in almost every facet of modern life, and soon they could even be integrated into the very clothes that we wear.
  • Article - 4 Mar 2012
    In this interview, Prof. Yoon-Bo Shim of South Korea's Pusan National University discusses how conductive polymers have seen great advancement during the last two decades.

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