Computation CHANGE TOPIC

Computation and theory news, March 2017

Single-atom memory maintains Moore's Law.

Specially selected papers from Applied Materials Today

To celebrate the latest CiteScoreTracker value of 5.57, the Editor-in-Chief highlights three key articles.

Strong earthquakes occur independently of each other, while minor shocks cluster together.

By combining computational and experimental approaches, scientists have nearly doubled the number of solar fuel materials.

Space transport to benefit from propulsion systems based on fusion plasma.

Honoring and Promoting a Young researcher active in the fields of Nanofabrication and Nanotechnology for Electronics, MEMS and Life Sciences.

Scientists have shown that DNA can control the assembly of bipyramidal gold nanoparticles into a complex crystal structure known as a clathrate.

The deadline is Monday 13 March 2017.

Sandwiching nanoclusters of magnesium oxide between two slices of graphene produces a material with enhanced optoelectronic properties.

The deadline is Monday 13 March 2017.

A new acoustic metamaterial can bend, shape and focus sound waves as they pass through it, potentially transforming medical imaging and personal audio.

Learn more about the newest addition to the Materials Today family.

The micro-looping technique used by brown recluse spiders to produce very strong silk could increase the strength of synthetic materials.

The first nonreciprocal mechanical metamaterial can easily transfer motion effortlessly in one direction while blocking it in the other.

New calculations show that ferroelectric materials could process information with multivalued logic, leading to faster, more efficient computing.

Scientists have managed to reverse a material’s Hall coefficient, by fabricating it as a ring mesh structure at a micrometer scale.

News archive…

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