Electronic CHANGE TOPIC

Electronic properties news, August 2019

Quantum materials could find uses in light-controlled electronic devices

Weyl semimetals could be used to fabricate new photonic devices

Uranium ditelluride is an unusual superconductor at low temperatures, with properties that could make it highly useful for quantum computing.

Researchers have found a way to use 3D printing to stretch and flatten twisted conjugated polymers so that they conduct electricity better.

Researchers have developed a new class of detergent-like ionic liquid electrolytes that can store energy more efficiently in supercapacitors.

By utilizing the quantum confinement effect, scientists have been able to produce perovskite-based LEDs with record-breaking brightness.

Researchers have discovered that the electrical properties of quantum materials known as Weyl semimetals can be controlled with light.

In the presence of a moiré pattern, electrons in graphene organize themselves into stripes, providing a link with superconductors.

Using a helium-ion microscope, researchers have created the world's densest nano arrays for anchoring magnetic fluxons in superconductors.

Treating perovskite solar cells with benzylamine to remove defects actually results in the formation of 2D material on the surface of the 3D crystal.

Scientists have shown that thin films of rust, or iron oxide, can generate electricity when saltwater flows over them.

By combining thin organic layers with thick layers of hybrid perovskite, researchers have developed micrometer-thick organic light-emitting diodes.

Scientists studying a ‘stripe-ordered’ cuprate superconductor discovered an unusual metallic state when trying switch off its superconductivity.

With the help of a novel insulator made of calcium fluoride, scientists have created an ultra-thin transistor with excellent electrical properties.

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