Nanostructures enable on-chip lightwave-electronic frequency mixer
Lightwave electronics aim to integrate optical and electronic systems at incredibly high speeds, leveraging the ultrafast oscillations of light fields.
Lightwave electronics aim to integrate optical and electronic systems at incredibly high speeds, leveraging the ultrafast oscillations of light fields.
Mechatronics combines electrical and mechanical engineering, but above all else it’s about design.
Electronic waste is a rapidly growing problem, but this degradable material could allow the recycling of parts from many single-use and wearable devices.
The work on excitons, originating from ultrathin materials, could impact future electronics and establishes a new way to study these particles through a powerful instrument at the Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Ultrathin material whose properties “already meet or exceed industry standards” enables superfast switching, extreme durability.
This tiny, biocompatible sensor may overcome one of the biggest hurdles that prevent the devices from being completely implanted.
The newly synthesized material could be the basis for wearable thermoelectric and spintronic devices.
This novel circuit architecture cancels out unwanted signals at the earliest opportunity.
The dedicated teacher and academic leader transformed research in computer architectures, parallel computing, and digital design, enabling faster and more efficient computation.
New camera chip design allows for optimizing each pixel’s timing to maximize signal-to-noise ratio when tracking real-time visual indicator of neural voltage.
Smaller than a coin, this optical device could enable rapid prototyping on the go.
The work could lead to ultra-efficient electronics and more.
A new quantum-system-on-chip enables the efficient control of a large array of qubits, moving toward practical quantum computing.
Fifteen new faculty members join six of the school’s academic departments.
Research sheds light on the properties of novel materials that could be used in electronics operating in extremely hot environments.