Laptops may have made hand-writing notes a thing of the past, but the pencil — or at least pencil lead — is making a comeback, as UA researchers are developing ways to use pencil lead as a conductor ...
Researchers at the University of California, Riverside have unlocked a hidden power within silicon, the backbone of modern electronics. Their findings could transform how future devices are built, ...
The electronics appliances sector stands at an inflexion point, especially with rapid releases of several new-age technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI) and more. As AI becomes one of the ...
Fraunhofer scientists have used ultra-thin diamond membranes to drastically cool electronic components and boost electric vehicle charging speeds, taking advantages of diamond's excellent thermal ...
The electronics industry is trending toward the microscale. Consumer devices keep getting smaller, and increasingly popular medical applications require tiny form factors. Addressing those ...
TOKYO & SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Renesas Electronics Corporation (“Renesas”, TSE: 6723), a supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions, and Altium Limited (“Altium”, ASX: ALU), a global leader in ...
A skin fashioned from fungal mycelium—the network of filaments that absorb organic matter and nutrients to nourish mushrooms—can be used as a substrate for electronic devices. The discovery offers an ...
XPANCEO, a deep tech company developing the next generation of computing through its first smart contact lenses, in collaboration with Nobel laureate Konstantin S. Novoselov (University of Manchester, ...
There’s a transition taking place in the power grid. Actually there are a number of transitions taking place and it’s a normal continuous process. Some are in the foreground while others are in the ...
Current directives and standards targeting end-of-life recycling. How carbon nanotubes are being used to create new components. The latest advances in graphene-based developments. This story of future ...
Brief, high-power pulses of electrical energy throbbing through intricate circuitry are the heartbeats of modern radar. But they are the bane of many an electronics engineer. Sometimes the ...