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IEEE Spectrum March 2008 Willie D. Jones |
Electronic Circuits That Bend and Stretch U.S. scientists claim they have developed an improved plastic circuit that is not only flexible but also stretchable and foldable. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2009 Neil Savage |
Organic Semiconductor Breakthrough Could Speed Flexible Circuits An Illinois company says it has made the first practical complementary polymer circuits. |
Chemistry World March 27, 2008 Kira Welter |
Silicon Circuits do the Twist Silicon circuits that can be bent, stretched and twisted without breaking or losing their electronic properties have been developed by US scientists. |
Chemistry World July 24, 2008 Simon Hadlington |
Nanotube mesh boosts plastic electronics Circuits on light, flexible surfaces could provide a range of products from paper-thin displays to intelligent food packaging and smart clothing. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2008 |
Slideshow: The Art of Failure Microscopic images of defects in microchips provide art for fevered imaginations. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2008 Monica Heger |
At Long Last, Plastic Electronics Goes Commercial Plastic Logic begins production today, racing with Polymer Vision to get flexible e-readers into consumers' hands |
Chemistry World October 17, 2010 Laura Howes |
Twist and shine An international team of researchers has developed flexible sheets of tiny light emitting diodes that could be implanted under the skin like glowing tattoos and used in a range of biomedical applications. |
Chemistry World September 27, 2012 Andy Extance |
Silicon sliver implants melt away A US-led team has made the first completely water-soluble silicon-based circuits and demonstrated simple medical implant devices that wouldn't need later removal. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2009 Mark Anderson |
Inside the Plastic Electronics Revolution IEEE Spectrum tours Plastic Logic's new fab in Dresden, Germany, where it will make its Kindle-killing e-reader |
Chemistry World August 7, 2008 |
Elastic Conductor Stretches Electronics Scientists have printed organic transistors onto elastic conducting materials to create stretchy electronic sheets. |
Technology Research News July 28, 2004 |
Process prints silicon on plastic The components could be used in flexible large-area displays, radiofrequency ID tags, sensors, and flexible applications like reconfigurable antennas. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2007 Samuel K. Moore |
Intel 45-Nanometer Penryn Processors Arrive Penryn chips are the result of the first fundamental redesign of the CMOS transistor |
IEEE Spectrum January 2009 |
Slideshow: LEDs Rock the House From Nine Inch Nails to Radiohead, performers are trading in pyrotechnics for LED F/X. |
Technology Research News June 15, 2005 |
Nanowire Computer Circuits Debut Researchers have found a way to paint molecular-size circuitry onto glass. The method is potentially very low-cost, and could eventually be used to make computer chips that pack extremely tiny and thus powerful circuits. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2009 |
Slideshow: Robots Gone Wild Creatures from across the animal kingdom offer design principles to make robots more useful, engaging, and lifelike |
IEEE Spectrum October 2008 |
Slideshow: A TechShop Snapshot Much inventive thinking takes place during a typical day at this community tool workshop. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2008 Erico Guizzo |
When the Wind Blows in the Galapagos How an ambitious wind-power project is helping protect one of the most exquisitely beautiful places on Earth. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2008 Erico Guizzo |
Green Machines This year's top tech cars squeeze more performance from less fuel than before, leaving a smaller carbon footprint. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2013 Andrew J. Steckl |
Electronics on Paper Paper electronics could pave the way to a new generation of cheap, flexible gadgets |
IEEE Spectrum March 2013 Joachim N. Burghartz |
Make Way for Flexible Silicon Chips We need them because thin, pliable organic semiconductors are too slow to serve in tomorrow's chips. Seamless integration of computing into everyday objects isn't quite here yet. |
Popular Mechanics February 5, 2010 Cassie Rodenberg |
Solar-Powered Circuits Charge by Sunlight in Real-Time Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania unveiled the world's first solar-powered circuit in a January edition of ACS Nano. The technology shows particular promise for touchscreen devices |
BusinessWeek May 10, 2004 Otis Por |
Just Two Words: Plastic Chips They can endow just about anything with computer smarts -- and they'll be cheap |
Technology Research News March 10, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Tiny pumps drive liquid circuits Researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Lucent Technologies' Bell Laboratories have combined microfluidics and organic electronics to make a tunable plastic transistor that could enable low-cost methods to drive, control and monitor labs-on-a-chip. The device can also use tiny amounts of fluid to adjust optical devices. |
Chemistry World Jon Cartwright |
Rollerball Writes Electronics Straight to Paper Electronic circuits can be fiddly to make: engineers have to snap components onto a board or etch designs onto a copper surface. Now a US group of researchers has demonstrated that all you really need is a pen and some paper. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2008 Jean Kumagai |
Ash Nehru: Everything Is Illuminated Photos of United Visual Artists latest exhibits that create sophisticated light displays. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2009 Joshua J. Romero |
Slideshow: The 2009 Consumer Electronics Show in Pictures Even in a slumping economy, CES had plenty of intriguing gadgets. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2008 |
Untethered Appliances Get Their Due New York's latest exhibit of techno-art brought whimsy to a warehouse gallery. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2008 |
Death of Digital Media In no time, some storage devices have leaped into oblivion. The media may survive, but will anyone be able to read them? |
IEEE Spectrum September 2010 Schow et al. |
Get on the Optical Bus IBM's light-powered links overcome the greatest speed bump in supercomputing: interconnect bandwidth |
PC Magazine January 18, 2006 |
Bits & Bites v25n2 Researchers have produced a stretchable type of silicon that could lead to stretchable electronic gadgets, artificial muscles and tissues, and flexible skins for robotic sensors. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2012 Liu et al. |
MEMS Switches for Low-Power Logic A modern twist on a trusted old technology -- the electromechanical relay -- could lead to ultralow-power chips |
Technology Research News June 4, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Plastic transistors go vertical Researchers from the University of Cambridge in England have brought inexpensive, practical organic transistors a step closer to your grocery cart by devising a pair of processes that form small, vertical transistors from layers of printed polymer. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2008 |
Slideshow: Powering a Far-flung Military The U.S. military, one of the world's most energy-hungry organizations, is tackling the mammoth task of ensuring its future security by using renewable energy sources |
Chemistry World March 18, 2014 Emma Stoye |
Electronic tag dissolves in water A water soluble radio-frequency identification tag that can melt away in a matter of minutes has been developed in John Rogers' lab at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the US. |
Technology Research News January 15, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Heat's on silicon A researcher from Texas A&M University has shown that the laws of physics are close to catching up with Moore's Law in a way not widely thought about. The culprit is heat. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2008 Sally Adee |
The Fastest, the Smallest, and the Strangest at IEDM This year's IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting, as usual, is largely a race to the bottom |
IEEE Spectrum August 2008 |
A Better Camera Pill Natural motions of the esophagus propel miniature cameras a rate that is too fast to take pictures. A new miniature camera will allow physicians to control the movement. |
Chemistry World March 27, 2012 Laura Howes |
Temporary tattoo to give you the sporting edge This Saturday, Nascar racer Paulie Harraka will be using a device based on John Rogers work at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign to monitor his hydration levels as he races. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2008 Sandra Upson |
Behold the Flying Robots Whether as rescue robot or flying spy, this micro-aerial vehicle could change how we look at the common housefly |
InternetNews January 16, 2007 David Needle |
HP Claims Chip Advance Researchers say nanotechnology has let them pack many more transistors into chips. |
Industrial Physicist Konstantin Likharev |
Hybrid Semiconductor-Molecular Nanoelectronics Many physicists and engineers believe that the impending crisis due to limitations in CMOS technology may be resolved only by a radical paradigm shift from purely CMOS technology to hybrid semiconductor-molecular circuits. |
Technology Research News December 17, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Microfluidics make flat screens A new method for making big, cheap flat screen displays is a bit like making muffins. Pour liquid polymer into microfluidic channels aligned above an array of electrodes, let cure, and you have organic thin film transistors. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2006 Brian R. Santo |
Acronym Addiction When you live on the cutting edge of technology, there are, literally, no words to describe it. Instead we have acronyms. Lots and lots of acronyms. ABT... BEOL... CSP... etc. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2009 |
Slideshow: The $71.2 Million Arm The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is spending at least US $71.2 million to reinvent prosthetic arms from the ground up. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2012 Miguel Miranda |
The Threat of Semiconductor Variability As transistors shrink, the problem of chip variability grows |
IEEE Spectrum May 2009 |
Slideshow: The Many Facets of Microchips A hand-drawn diagram, a long-forgotten memo, a photo of a Ferrari -- intriguing images of chips and their creators. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2008 Chang & Subramian |
Electronic Noses Sniff Success E-noses will soon be ubiquitous, thanks to printed organic semiconductors. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2006 Samuel K. Moore |
Cheap Chips for Next Wireless Frontier IBM engineers unveiled the first experimental 60-GHz transmitter and receiver chips. Now, researchers are presenting three key transceiver components built in a widely available and inexpensive silicon process technology. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2008 Behzad Razavi |
Gadgets Gab at 60 GHz Cheap silicon transceivers broadcasting in this still-unlicensed band may usher in the hi-def wireless home |
IEEE Spectrum December 2007 John Voelcker |
Automakers Big and Small Show Off Electric Cars Spectrum takes a look at the crowd favorites at the Electric Vehicle Symposium |