A carbon nanotube 10,000 times as thin as a human hair turns radio waves into music, acting like a tiny radio, by researchers at the University of California, Irvine…Read more.
A carbon nanotube 10,000 times as thin as a human hair turns radio waves into music, acting like a tiny radio, by researchers at the University of California, Irvine…Read more.
According to a University of California team, the study marks the first time that a nano-sized detector has been demonstrated in a working radio system…Read more.
Chris Rutherglen, the grad student at the University of California at Irvine, has constructed a key part–a demodulator out of a carbon nanotube 50 microns long and about 1.5 nanometers wide…Read more.
Carbon nanotubes can route electrical signals on a computer chip faster than traditional copper or aluminum wires…Read more.
These 0.4 cm nanotubes are 10 times longer than previously created electrically conducting nanotubes…Read more.
UC Irvine announced that scientists at The Henry Samueli School of Engineering have synthesized the world’s longest electrically conducting nanotubes…Read more.
UC Irvine announced that scientists at The Henry Samueli School of Engineering have synthesized the world’s longest electrically conducting nanotubes…Read more.
UC Irvine announced that scientists at The Henry Samueli School of Engineering have synthesized the world’s longest electrically conducting nanotubes…Read More.
Breakthrough discovery is 10 times longer than previous current-carrying nanotubes, paves way for supercomputer and health care applications…Read More.
Breakthrough discovery is 10 times longer than previous current-carrying nanotubes, paves way for supercomputer and health care applications…Read More.