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A study showing how electrons flow around sharp bends, such as those found in integrated circuits, has the potential to improve how these circuits, commonly used in electronic and optoelectronic ...
A river erodes its course. In an electric circuit, does the wiring get eroded by the current, atoms, electrons etc? — Bill "It's a reasonable analogy to think of an electric current acting like a flow ...
In solar cells, solar radiation boosts electrons to higher energy states, thereby releasing them from their atomic bonds as electricity begins to flow. Scientists have now developed a novel method to ...
In graphene, electrons move in strange ways. Their unusual and fluid-like behavior was observed by scientists at the National Graphene Institute, leading to a new wave of studies related to the ...
A new nanostructure acts like a wire and switch that can, for the first time, control and direct the flow of quantum ...
Time to retire the old soldering iron? In the “atomtronic” circuits pictured on the right, it is atoms, not electrons, that flow. Such circuits could form the basis for ultra-sensitive gyroscopes.
If you want an electrical current to flow around a normal metal ring you have to supply enough energy to overcome the metal’s resistance – right? Not always, according to physicists in the US and ...
Key learning points Electrical charges What are free electrons? Cell polarity Conventional current direction Electrons orbit the nucleus. An atom has a neutral charge, because it contains the same ...
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Live Science on MSNElectronics breakthrough means our devices may one day no longer emit waste heat, scientists say
A new "optoexcitonic switch" already achieves state-of-the-art performance over current electronics and could serve as the ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNNew nano switch channels excitons at room temperature, unlocks faster, cooler computing
Scientists built a nano switch that controls excitons, chargeless quantum quasiparticles, at room temperature.
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