Articles
Graphene electrodes benefit molecular electronic devices
An international team of researchers has revealed a new way to tune the functionality of next-generation molecular electronic devices using graphene. [ + ]
LoRa creates big Industrial IoT opportunity in China
Pundits predict China's IoT market will balloon to more than $120 billion by 2022. A significant part of this market opportunity is composed of promising industrial projects around water and gas meters, smart parking, and asset monitoring and tracking. [ + ]
Making flexible electronics with nanowire networks
If flexible smartphones, e-paper and a new generation of smart watches are to succeed, they can't use existing touchscreen technology. [ + ]
Heat-resistant transducers developed
Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Silicate Research ISC have successfully realised piezo sensors that can continuously monitor components as hot as 900°C. [ + ]
Quartz power for lithium-sulfur batteries
Swiss electrochemistry researchers have developed a method that could enable a breakthrough for the lithium-sulfur battery — a promising candidate for future energy storage devices. [ + ]
Graphene-based camera can image invisible light
Spanish researchers have developed a CMOS integrated camera consisting of hundreds of thousands of photodetectors based on graphene and quantum dots (QD), which is capable of imaging visible and infrared light at the same time. [ + ]
Making the impossible possible and the common easy
How do you protect yourself from disruption? How do you innovate without radically increasing the cost of doing business? It all boils down to one simple question: do you feel secure in the tools you're using? [ + ]
Electroplating cathodes creates powerful batteries
US and Chinese researchers have taken the same process that makes gold-plated jewellery or chrome car accents, known as electroplating, and applied it to lithium-ion battery cathodes. [ + ]
Smart exoskeleton supports seniors
Wearable machines that enhance movement and endurance no longer belong to the realm of science fiction, with European researchers developing a smart exoskeleton that recognises loss of balance and prevents falling in elderly patients. [ + ]
Stretchable electronics: everything you need to know
Stretchable electronics has been in the making for more than a decade, but up to now it has been mostly a solution looking for a problem. Recent analysis by IDTechEx Research, however, finds that this is about to change. [ + ]
Transparent thin films with high conductivity
US researchers have discovered a nanoscale-thin film material with what is said to be the highest ever conductivity in its class, in a breakthrough which could lead to smaller, faster and more powerful electronics. [ + ]
Flexible, organic and biodegradable: electronics based on human skin
US researchers have developed a semiconductor that is as flexible as skin and easily degradable, offering diverse medical and environmental applications without adding to the mounting pile of global electronic waste. [ + ]
Making the most of managed test systems
The media tends to focus on the consumer Internet of Things, but thinking of a test system as an IoT device presents additional opportunities. [ + ]
Graphene 'copy machine' to produce cheaper wafers
MIT engineers have developed a technique that could vastly reduce the overall cost of wafer technology for the semiconductor industry, enabling devices made from more exotic, higher performing materials than conventional silicon. [ + ]
Understanding how modern induction cookers work
The induction cooktop is quite popular, both in domestic and commercial usage, and is considered one of the advanced technological innovations in the field of cooking. [ + ]