by James R. Ward | Jun 15, 2021 | Graphene
Graphene and batteries Graphene, a sheet of carbon atoms bound together in a honeycomb lattice pattern, is hugely recognized as a “wonder material” due to the myriad of astonishing attributes it holds. It is a potent conductor of electrical and thermal energy,...
by James R. Ward | May 27, 2020 | Graphene
The performance of a computer isn’t measured by its speed but by the operations it can do .Thus flop was introduced which means number of… The performance of a computer isn’t measured by its speed but by the operations it can do .Thus flop was introduced which means...
by James R. Ward | Jan 31, 2020 | Graphene
Graphene is insanely useful, but very difficult to produce — until now. Graphene is a lattice of carbon atoms arranged in a chicken-wire formation, a structure that makes it very useful for a wide range of applications. However, it’s been very difficult and expensive...
by James R. Ward | Apr 10, 2018 | Graphene, Semiconductor
Slowing productivity improvements and rising costs for silicon have business leaders evaluating other materials. The path from breakthrough discovery to transformational industry applications can be a long, circuitous one. Often the first rush of possibility is...
by James R. Ward | Aug 5, 2017 | Graphene
A group of researchers teamed up to develop a graphene-based transistor, which drastically outpaced the silicon ones used in most computers. It’s smaller but more powerful. Graphene At It Again The discovery of graphene in 2004 began a flurry of studies to...
by James R. Ward | May 17, 2011 | Graphene
Graphene: Is It the Future for Semiconductors?An Overview of the Material, Devices, and Applications by Yaw Obeng and Purushothaman Srinivasan In this article, we attempt to summarize the graphene component of the ECS symposia series on “Graphene, Ge/III-V, Nanowires,...