Graphene chips could pose health hazard
BCS
Scientists at the University of Glasgow believe that the super-conducting material graphene could pose a potential health risk. Single-atom-thick sheets of the superconductor were first created in 2004 by Nobel laureates Professor Andre Geim and ...
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BCS
Scientists at the University of Glasgow believe that the super-conducting material graphene could pose a potential health risk. Single-atom-thick sheets of the superconductor were first created in 2004 by Nobel laureates Professor Andre Geim and ...
and more »
TechEye
Health fears hamper graphene development
TechEye
Following its discovery by two researchers at Manchester University ? now both in possession of Nobel prizes and knighthoods ? atom-thick graphene has exhibited many astounding qualities. With the potential to revolutionise the chip industry and ...
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TechEye
Following its discovery by two researchers at Manchester University ? now both in possession of Nobel prizes and knighthoods ? atom-thick graphene has exhibited many astounding qualities. With the potential to revolutionise the chip industry and ...
and more »
EFYTimes (press release)
Discovery could stop graphene chips frying
BCS
However, the material conducts too well and would cause chips to melt within a fraction of a second. This problem has baffled scientists ever since graphene's discovery, but the Manchester team now thinks it has made another breakthrough.
Graphene transistors could herald more computing powerThe Engineer
Graphene To Replace Silicon In Computer Chips?EFYTimes (press release)
Study Results Help Advance Graphene ElectronicsAzom.com
Next Big Future -Proactive Investors Australia
all 36 news articles »
BCS
However, the material conducts too well and would cause chips to melt within a fraction of a second. This problem has baffled scientists ever since graphene's discovery, but the Manchester team now thinks it has made another breakthrough.
Graphene transistors could herald more computing powerThe Engineer
Graphene To Replace Silicon In Computer Chips?EFYTimes (press release)
Study Results Help Advance Graphene ElectronicsAzom.com
Next Big Future -Proactive Investors Australia
all 36 news articles »
Graphene-based composites could cool electronics
physicsworld.com
... they have developed a new "thermal interface material" (TIM) that could efficiently remove unwanted heat from electronic components such as computer chips or light-emitting diodes. The material is a composite of graphene and multilayer graphene.
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physicsworld.com
... they have developed a new "thermal interface material" (TIM) that could efficiently remove unwanted heat from electronic components such as computer chips or light-emitting diodes. The material is a composite of graphene and multilayer graphene.
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Graphene Goes 3D: No Glasses Necessary
PCWorld
See, you have to pack transistors pretty tightly on a computer chip; each chip has to have regulated voltage in order to perform its task of being on or off. Graphene, even insulated up the wazoo, leaks its charge out, which would cook the surrounding ...
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PCWorld
See, you have to pack transistors pretty tightly on a computer chip; each chip has to have regulated voltage in order to perform its task of being on or off. Graphene, even insulated up the wazoo, leaks its charge out, which would cook the surrounding ...
and more »
Graphene goes 3D: No glasses necessary
ITworld.com
See, you have to pack transistors pretty tightly on a computer chip; each chip has to have regulated voltage in order to perform its task of being on or off. Graphene, even insulated up the wazoo, leaks its charge out, which would cook the surrounding ...
and more »
ITworld.com
See, you have to pack transistors pretty tightly on a computer chip; each chip has to have regulated voltage in order to perform its task of being on or off. Graphene, even insulated up the wazoo, leaks its charge out, which would cook the surrounding ...
and more »
ExtremeTech
Graphene acts as plasmonic antenna, leads towards 0.1nm wires in chips
ExtremeTech
By Sebastian Anthony on February 2, 2012 at 12:01 pm Are you sick of graphene-related breakthroughs yet? No? Excellent! That's good news because I'm about to write the coolest, sexiest, most scientific sentence you'll ever see on ExtremeTech.
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ExtremeTech
By Sebastian Anthony on February 2, 2012 at 12:01 pm Are you sick of graphene-related breakthroughs yet? No? Excellent! That's good news because I'm about to write the coolest, sexiest, most scientific sentence you'll ever see on ExtremeTech.
and more »
Gold-coated nanowires provide low-cost gas detection method
The Engineer
'Chip-based sensors that rely on nanomaterials for detection would be less expensive and more portable as workers could wear them to monitor poisonous gases, such as hydrogen sulphide.' According to a statement, Star and his research team determined ...
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The Engineer
'Chip-based sensors that rely on nanomaterials for detection would be less expensive and more portable as workers could wear them to monitor poisonous gases, such as hydrogen sulphide.' According to a statement, Star and his research team determined ...
and more »
Is Germanium a potential candidate to work along with Silicon in future computers?
EE Herald
Even with the present technology of chip-making chip-experts will always look for other semiconductor materials such as Germanium or any high electron mobility material. Graphene is also found to be very interesting candidate.
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EE Herald
Even with the present technology of chip-making chip-experts will always look for other semiconductor materials such as Germanium or any high electron mobility material. Graphene is also found to be very interesting candidate.
and more »
Will Graphene Replace the Silicon Chip?
Big Think (blog)
A pair of Nobel laureates have created what might become the replacement to the silicon computer chip. Professor Andre Geim and Professor Konstantin Novoselov have constructed a multi-layer graphene transistor which succeeds where past models have ...
and more »
Big Think (blog)
A pair of Nobel laureates have created what might become the replacement to the silicon computer chip. Professor Andre Geim and Professor Konstantin Novoselov have constructed a multi-layer graphene transistor which succeeds where past models have ...
and more »