Scientists unveil a rubber band that generates electricity from body heat
A team led by scientists from Peking University has developed a rubber-like material that converts body heat into electricity. This advance ...
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A team led by scientists from Peking University has developed a rubber-like material that converts body heat into electricity. This advance ...
Read moreDetailsAddressing a major roadblock in next-generation photonic computing and signal processing systems, researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of ...
Read moreDetailsResearchers have long been searching for alternatives to lead-based perovskites for use in electronic devices due to concerns about toxicity and ...
Read moreDetailsSilicon semiconductors used in existing photodetectors have low light responsivity, and the two-dimensional semiconductor MoS₂ (molybdenum disulfide) is so thin that ...
Read moreDetailsNew applications often require new materials. Quite often, materials are needed that do not occur naturally or have very specific properties. ...
Read moreDetailsAn interdisciplinary research team has engineered a new class of organic photoelectrochemical transistors (OPECTs). These tiny devices can convert light into ...
Read moreDetailsCornell researchers have uncovered a nearly invisible culprit hindering the development of next-generation, high-power electronics: a microscopic layer of carbon contamination, ...
Read moreDetailsWhat do children's building blocks and quantum computing have in common? The answer is modularity.
Read moreDetailsIn a milestone for scalable quantum technologies, scientists from Boston University, UC Berkeley, and Northwestern University have reported the world's first ...
Read moreDetailsWhen aiming for stretchable, health-monitoring, skin-like sensor sheets, materials with demanding properties are required: they need to be flexible, biocompatible, and ...
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