Optical materials news, January 2014

Researchers have taken the first steps in a project to develop fast-blinking LED systems for underwater optical communications.

A new method could eventually find applications from nondestructive testing of materials to sound suppression.

Researchers at MIT have come up with a new approach to transparent displays that can have significant advantages over existing systems.

Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory have demonstrated broadband terahertz (THz) wave generation using metamaterials.

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Duke University researchers have demonstrated the feasibility of wireless power transfer using low-frequency magnetic fields.

Two university research teams have worked together to produce the world’s fastest thin-film organic transistors.

The MATLAB figure viewer is now available in over 100 Elsevier journals, spanning materials science, computer science, engineering and more.

The birthplace of the digital computer, ENIAC, is using this technology in the rebirth of analog computing.

Researchers in the United States have suggested an alternative way to allocate science funding.

A team has developed a new X-ray holography method that will enable snap-shots of dynamic processes at highest spatial resolution.

A team of scientists from NUS has successfully developed a method to chemically exfoliate molybdenum disulfide crystals.

We look over the best materials science news items that are the most read over the month of December 2013.

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