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Results 5311 - 5320 of 7372 for ELectrons
  • News - 16 Aug 2007
    The prospect for the wide spread use of hydrogen as a portable energy carrier is dependent on finding a clean, renewable method of production. At Penn State University, a research group headed by...
  • News - 8 Aug 2007
    Recent winner of the 2007 Queens Award for Enterprise, INCADryCool has always excelled in high quality accurate quantitative nanoanalysis. Following in this tradition, Oxford Instruments Analytical...
  • News - 31 Jul 2007
    From turning gasoline into electricity to improving the operation of energy-saving devices, University of Houston professors are working on a number of breakthroughs they plan to showcase at the next...
  • News - 30 Jul 2007
    John F. DiTusa, professor of physics and astronomy at LSU, and his international colleagues have discovered an unusual magnetic material that behaves very differently from the average refrigerator...
  • News - 27 Jul 2007
    Often, things can be improved by a little “contamination.” Steel, for example, is iron with a bit of carbon mixed in. To produce materials for modern electronics, small amounts of...
  • News - 5 Jun 2007
    Researchers at the University of Illinois are developing panels of microcavity plasma lamps that may soon brighten people's lives. The thin, lightweight panels could be used for residential and...
  • News - 31 May 2007
    Better magnetic storage devices for computers and other electronics could result from new work by researchers in the United States and Germany. Their findings demonstrate that chirality – a...
  • Article - 14 Aug 2013
    Aluminum arsenide is a semiconductor material that has almost the same lattice constant as that of gallium arsenide. It can form a superlattice with gallium arsenide which results in its semiconductor...
  • Article - 19 Apr 2013
    Indium nitride is a small bandgap semiconductor material having potential application in high speed electronics and solar cells.
  • Article - 17 Apr 2013
    Diamond is an allotrope of carbon wherein carbon atoms are arranged in the form of a diamond cube. Diamond is transparent to opaque due to its optical isotropic properties.

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