ANN ARBOR--The thinnest, smoothest layer of silver that can survive air exposure has been laid down at the University of Michigan, and it could change the way touchscreens and flat or flexible ...
Researchers create transparent silver nanowire electrodes to improve IR cameras, enabling clearer imaging and flexible designs for real-world applications. (Nanowerk News) Infrared imaging helps us ...
A new fabrication process for transparent ultra-thin silver films has been developed. The material may help build highly efficient solar cells and light-emitting diodes. However, traditional chemical ...
Researchers at the University of Michigan have made plastic conductive while also making it more transparent by incorporating silver, copper, zinc and aluminium to sheets of the material. In a paper ...
Transparent electrodes are in and of themselves nothing all that new – they’re currently used in things like touchscreens and flat-screen TVs. Thanks to research being conducted at Indiana’s Purdue ...
A new method prints highly transparent, silver nanowire electrodes in one step. These electrodes could be particularly useful for flexible electronics, such as ...
The thinnest, smoothest layer of silver that can survive air exposure could change the way touchscreens and flat or flexible displays are made. The thinnest, smoothest layer of silver that can survive ...
It could also help improve computing power, affecting both the transfer of information within a silicon chip and the patterning of the chip itself through metamaterial superlenses. By combining the ...
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