The U.S. molecular electronics market is estimated to be worth USD 24.35 billion in 2025 and is projected to increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15.75% to reach USD 159.88 billion by ...
Researchers have developed a series of techniques to build carbon nanoribbons atom by atom, engineering their electronic properties from the ground up rather than carving them from bulk material.
The molecular-scale design of materials is one of the major frontiers in modern science. Flat, highly conjugated organic molecules are already used in advanced technologies such as chemical sensors, ...
By placing single-atom p-block metal adlayers on gold electrodes, researchers quantified the interfacial hopping integral, ...
By placing single-atom-thick adlayers of p-block metals on commonly employed gold electrodes (d-block), a research team at National Taiwan University has successfully quantified the "interfacial ...
Researchers flip the switch at the nanoscale by applying light to induce bonding for single-molecule device switching. In a new Nature Communications study, Columbia Engineering researchers report ...
The molecular-scale design of materials is one of the major frontiers in modern science. Flat, highly conjugated organic molecules are already used in ...
A Ghanaian Scientist’s breakthrough research on fluorescent molecular probes could transform how the world detects cancer at ...
These days, there is an assumption worldwide that gold should be purchased for future investment. All the big investors would suggest buying gold as t.
Queen Mary Researchers Help Unlock the Secrets Behind 20% Efficient Organic Solar Cells.
Next-generation optoelectronic systems (devices that convert light to electrical energy) leverage organic semiconductor-based indoor energy-autonomous architectures for cutting-edge applications.
The longest chains of the conductive polymer poly(p-phenylene; PPP) produced to date are just under one micrometer (thousandth of a millimeter) long—almost an order of magnitude longer than previously ...