Research Highlights |
Featured
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Research Highlights |
Printing tiny coiled antennas
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Research Highlights |
Magnetic switch for memory
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Letter |
Coherent singlet-triplet oscillations in a silicon-based double quantum dot
Exploiting the weak interactions between electron spins and nuclear spins in silicon-based quantum dots leads to a dephasing time two orders of magnitude greater than in analogous gallium-arsenide-based devices, demonstrating the potential of silicon as a host material for quantum information processing.
- B. M. Maune
- , M. G. Borselli
- & A. T. Hunter
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Letter |
Tuning charge transport in solution-sheared organic semiconductors using lattice strain
A solution-processing method known as solution shearing is used to introduce lattice strain to organic semiconductors, thus improving charge carrier mobility.
- Gaurav Giri
- , Eric Verploegen
- & Zhenan Bao
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Review Article |
Assembly of hybrid photonic architectures from nanophotonic constituents
- Oliver Benson
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Review Article |
Multigate transistors as the future of classical metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistors
- Isabelle Ferain
- , Cynthia A. Colinge
- & Jean-Pierre Colinge
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Review Article |
Tunnel field-effect transistors as energy-efficient electronic switches
- Adrian M. Ionescu
- & Heike Riel
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Research Highlights |
A waterproof memory device
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Research Highlights |
Skin-deep electronics
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News |
'Electronic skin' could replace bulky electrodes
Wearable sensor could help monitor health, amplify speech or control prosthetics.
- Ed Yong
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Letter |
Inkjet printing of single-crystal films
- Hiromi Minemawari
- , Toshikazu Yamada
- & Tatsuo Hasegawa
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Research Highlights |
Materials science: Graphene layers made to order
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Opinion |
Harnessing telecoms cables for science
Telecommunications companies and oceanographers should work together to plug old and new submarine cables into research projects, says Yuzhu You. A global network could monitor climate change.
- Yuzhu You
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News |
No link found between mobile phones and cancer
Claims that mobile-phone use causes cancer are shown to be overblown.
- Daniel Cressey
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Research Highlights |
Electronics: Caught on film
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News & Views |
Nanothermal trumpets
The thermal process known as Joule heating, which often plagues electronic devices, has been turned to good use: making devices that can produce sound as well as reproduce music and speech.
- Rama Venkatasubramanian