Clarkson University
Clarkson University (Pottsdam, NY) has the Nanoscale Science and Engineering for Material Systems and Material Processing Center for Advanced Materials Processing & Department of Mechanical & Aeronautical Engineering to study nanotechnology.
Proposed Projects: Ferromagnetic and Mechanical Behavior of Nanostructured Ni Films, Micro/Nano-Particle Motion and Manipulations, Production of Nanoparticles by Nucleation and Growth, Structural Health Monitoring Using Nanoscale Smart Sensors, Well-Defined Polymer Nanocomposites, Metal Nanoparticle Arrays by Electrodeposition, Identification of Defects in Nanofiltration Membranes & Production of Nano-Composites Using Intensified Reactors
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After the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov "for groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material graphene," even more research and development efforts have been focused on two-dimensional nanostructures. Illustrating the importance of this area in future applications, Two-Dimensional Nanostructures covers the fabrication methods and properties of these materials.
Researchers from University of Texas at Austin, in collaboration with researchers in Taiwan and China, have developed the world's smallest semiconductor laser, invisible to the naked eye.
NanoScienceWorks.org looks at the dynamic area of nano-semoconductors, and how these tiny devices are fundamentally changing the worlds of computing and communications. We speak with the author of Nano-Semiconductor: Devices and Technology, Dr. Krzysztof Iniewski, who manages R&D developments at Redlen Technologies, Inc., a start-up firm in British Columbia, Canada. His research interests are in VLSI circuits for medical and security applications.
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