Highlights
Mar 7, 2011
Renewable Energy Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (2008)
Metal Free Silicon Nanowires
Somilkumar Rathi, Joe Beach, Paul Stradins, Craig Taylor, and Reuben Collins; Renewable Energy MRSEC, NSF DMR-0820518
Silicon nanowires are potentially transformative photovoltaic materials. Nanowire arrays are commonly synthesized using metal seeds. The growth process often introduces metal impurities into wires which degrade their electronic properties. We have used a plasma-assisted, vapor-liquid-solid process to grow silicon nanowires using tin seeds. The tin is etched by the hydrogen plasma while the wires grow, resulting in self terminating wires which are metal free.
Mar 7, 2011
Renewable Energy Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (2008)
Novel thin flexible hybrid inorganic/polymer films
Daniel Knauss and Andrew Herring, Renewable Energy MRSEC, NSF DMR-0820518
We have demonstrated the first ever hybrid polymer film of an insoluble polymer with an acid (top picture).
Jan 26, 2011
UMN Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (2014)
Printed, Flexible Carbon Nanotube Digital Circuits
Dan Frisbie
Graduate student Mingjing Ha working with Optomec, Inc. and Northwestern University collaborators (Mark Hersam) has demonstrated low voltage, fast carbon nanotube (CNT) circuits printed on flexible plastic substrates. The circuits are fabricated by aerosol jet printing from a liquid dielectric ink (ion gel) and a purified semiconducting CNT ink (Northwestern). The printed semiconducting CNTs form the channels in thin film transistors and printed circuits.
Jan 12, 2011
UMN Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (2014)
ZnO Nanowires for DNA Electrophoresis
Kevin Dorfman, Eray Aydil
Our team has developed a simple solution-based method to fabricate arrays of ZnO nanowires inside of a glass microchannel.
Jan 12, 2011
UMN Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (2014)
Discovery of a Frank-Kasper σ Phase in Sphere-Forming Block Copolymer Melts
Frank Bates
Ordering of spherical particles represents a fundamental topic in materials science and engineering ranging from the sub-nanometer scale packing of atoms in simple crystals to micron sized assemblies of colloids.
Jan 11, 2011
Cornell Center for Materials Research (2017)
Graphene Grains make Atomic Patchwork Quilts
P. Y. Huang et al., Nature (Published Online 5 Jan 2011)
Stitching defects make the film weaker, but have no electronic effect
Dec 20, 2010
NYU Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (2014)
Pleats on Crystals on Curved Surfaces
W.T.M. Irvine, V. Vitteli, P. M. Chaikin
Electrically charged polymer colloids attracted to the surface of water droplets of different shapes crystallize on their curved surfaces.
The curvature frustrates perfect crystallization and defects must be added such as the familiar twelve pentagons which decorate the otherwise hexagonal faces of a soccer ball. The pentagons/disclinations strongly relax curvature.
Dec 1, 2010
MIT Center for Materials Science and Engineering (2014)
Multimaterial acoustic fibers
S. Egusa, Z. Wang, N. Chocat, Z.M. Ruff, A.M. Stolyarov, D. Shemuly, F. Sorin, P.T. Rakich, J.D. Joannopoulos, and Y. Fink (MIT MRSEC, IRG-III)
Following up on their recent creation of light-sensitive fibers,
Professors Yoel Fink and Joannopoulos and their research teams have
developed fibers that can detect ("hear") and produce sound ("sing").
Sep 13, 2010
JHU Materials Research Science Engineering Center (2005)
Lateral Organic Devices
B. M. Dhar, G. S. Kini, G. Xia, B. J. Jung, N. Markovic, and H. E. Katz
Background: Most
organic devices, from organic light emitting diodes to organic
spintronic devices vertical devices, where the essential interfaces are
buried and thus not subject to investigation.
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