For future wearables, thread tellurium through nanotubes? - Futurity
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Boron nitride nanotubes encase tellurium atomic chains like a straw, which light and pressure could control, report researchers.
Boron nitride nanotubes encase tellurium atomic chains like a straw, which light and pressure could control, report researchers.
To cram ever more computing power into your pocket, engineers need to come up with increasingly ingenious ways to add…
Wearable tech and electronic cloth may be the way of the future, but getting there requires wiring that is strong, flexible and…
Wearable tech and electronic cloth may be the way of the future, but getting there requires wiring that is strong, flexible and…
Advances in wearable technology are possible with the increased application of nanotechnology, in the form of nanowires and…
Wearable tech and electronic cloth may be the way of the future, but to get there the wiring needs to be strong, flexible and…
Researchers from Michigan Technological University, Purdue University, Washington University and the University of Texas at…
Electronic cloth and wearable tech could be the path forward. However, to reach there, it is essential for the wiring to be…
Thanks to a new Army-funded project, a material from tellurium—a rare earth element—can potentially create the world’s tiniest…
.newsblock { width: 200px; height:200px; float:right; padding-left:15px; padding-right:15px; } Wearable tech and electronic…
Wearable tech and electronic cloth may be the way of the future, but to get there the wiring needs to be strong, flexible and…
Wearable tech requires both strength and flexibility. A new nanowire design -- a boron nitride nanotube (BNNT) filled with…
Researchers have discovered that a material forms a DNA-like helix when reduced to a string of atoms, as seen by the pink line…
A material shaped like a one-dimensional DNA helix might further push the limits on a transistor's size.
Researchers have discovered that a material forms a DNA-like helix when reduced to a string of atoms, as seen by the pink line…
( Nanowerk News ) Computer chips use billions of tiny switches, called transistors, to process information.
Post Views: 1 Wearable tech and electronic cloth may be the way of the future, but to get there the wiring needs to be strong…
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. -- A material from a rare earth element, tellurium, could produce the world's smallest transistor…
Wearable tech and electronic cloth may be the way of the future, but to get there the wiring needs to be strong, flexible and…
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. -- Computer chips use billions of tiny switches, called transistors, to process information.