Nobel Prize winners showcase quantum tunnelling in macroscopic circuits, paving the way for quantum computing.
A study showing how electrons flow around sharp bends, such as those found in integrated circuits, has the potential to improve how these circuits, commonly used in electronic and optoelectronic ...
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- A study showing how electrons flow around sharp bends, such as those found in integrated circuits, has the potential to improve how these circuits, commonly used in electronic and ...
Think of it this way: if you roll a ball toward a wall, it will bounce back. That's normal physics. But in the quantum world, ...
Physicists have directly measured, for the first time at nanometer resolution, the fluid-like flow of electrons in graphene. The results have applications in developing new, low-resistance materials, ...
Researchers at the University of California, Riverside, discovered how to control electrical flow through crystalline silicon, a material at the core of modern technology. The discovery could lead to ...
(Nanowerk News) A new study from the Weizmann Institute of Science in collaboration with Manchester University and UC Irvine shows that an electronic fluid can flow through materials without any ...
After a year of trial and error, Liyang Chen had managed to whittle down a metallic wire into a microscopic strand half the width of an E.coli bacterium — just thin enough to allow a trickle of ...