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Results 5181 - 5190 of 5247 for semiconductors
  • News - 17 May 2006
    MIT researchers are trying to unleash the promise of an old idea by converting light into electricity more efficiently than ever before. The research is applying new materials, new technologies and...
  • News - 16 Dec 2005
    Georgia Tech scientists and engineers are pursuing the dictum that "smaller is better" to develop a new breed of highly-integrated silicon-based microchips capable of operating in...
  • News - 22 Nov 2005
    Since the creation of the first working laser – a ruby model made in 1960 – scientists have fashioned these light sources from substances ranging from neon to sapphire. Silicon, however,...
  • News - 15 Nov 2005
    Ohio State University researchers have invented a new organic polymer tunnel diode – an electronic component that could one day lead to plastic computer memory and plastic logic circuits on...
  • News - 10 Nov 2005
    Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. invited an alysts to present the company's mid- and long-term visions in the largest-scale Analyst Day event ever hosted by an Asian corporation. The company...
  • News - 27 Oct 2005
    Light can carry data at much higher rates than electricity, but it has always been too expensive and difficult to use light to transmit data among silicon chips in electronic devices. Now, electrical...
  • News - 21 Oct 2005
    In the lab and classroom of Stanford mechanical engineering Professor Fritz Prinz, fuel cell technology is cooler than ever—literally and figuratively. In four papers presented at an...
  • News - 18 Aug 2005
    A recent EU project designed and developed a new demonstrator microchip that will dramatically cut the cost of producing new wireless products and could mean that a whole range of existing products...
  • News - 16 Aug 2005
    A research team led by engineers at the University of California, Berkeley, has developed a new technique to handle metal defects in low-grade silicon, an advance that could dramatically reduce the...
  • News - 2 Aug 2005
    A new sensor being patented by Ohio State University could be used to detect concealed weapons or help pilots see better through rain and fog. Unlike X-ray machines or radar instruments, the sensor...

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