The World’s First Wood Transistorby Linköping UniversityElectrical current modulation in wood electrochemical transistor
NewsA Nanoscale Device to Generate High-Power Terahertz Wavesby Ecole Polytechnique Federale de LausanneResearchers at EPFL have developed a nanodevice that operates more than 10 times faster than today's fastest transistors
NewsEngineers Make Transistors and Electronic Devices Entirely from Threadby Tufts UniversityTransistors and integrated circuits made from threads are combined with thread-based sensors to create fully flexible devices
NewsAmes Laboratory Scientists Move Graphene Closer to Transistor Applicationsby Ames LaboratoryThe inability to control or tune graphene’s unique properties has been an obstacle to its application
NewsA Device to Control “Color” of Electrons in Graphene Provides Path to Future Electronicsby Penn StateInstrument is one step forward in a new field of physics called valleytronics
NewsWith Simple Process, Engineers Fabricate Fastest Flexible Silicon Transistorby University of Wisconsin-MadisonTransistor that operates at a record 38 gigahertz, though simulations show it could be capable of operating at a mind-boggling 110 gigahertz
NewsAnnihilating Nanoscale Defectsby Argonne National LaboratoryResearchers may have found a way for the semiconductor industry to hit miniaturization targets on time and without defects
NewsElectronics Get a Power Boost with the Addition of Simple Materialby Penn State Materials Research InstituteVanadium dioxide leads to a better transistor
NewsLiquid Cooling Moves onto the Chip for Denser Electronicsby Georgia Institute of TechnologySuch systems would no longer require heat sinks or cooling fans on top of the integrated circuits
NewsDiscovery Could Help Beat the Heat Problem in Computer Chipsby SLAC National Accelerator LaboratoryX-ray studies conducted at SLAC confirm long-theorized 3D property in exotic material.
NewsImproving Organic Transistors that Drive Flexible and Conformable Electronicsby University of Massachusetts AmherstUMass Amherst scientists advance understanding of strain effects on performance.