News

Penn State researchers have built the world’s first CMOS computer entirely from two-dimensional materials, marking a leap ...
Two-dimensional materials can be exploited to make a new kind of electronic device that researchers have dubbed an atomristor. In early stage studies, the researchers have demonstrated a possible ...
The discovery? The creation of two-dimensional materials no thicker than a few atoms — something that's never been seen before in nature. The research that led to this incredible find was led by ...
Two-dimensional materials are substances with a thickness of a few nanometres or less. Electrons in these materials are free to move in the two-dimensional plane, but their restricted motion in ...
It’s all down to the material’s two-dimensional molecular structure, something once thought to be prohibitively difficult in the world of polymer science. The 2D polymer material assembles ...
Two-dimensional (2D) materials have been the focus of intense study in the last decade, but prior to the work of Yuanxi Wang, a recent Penn State doctoral graduate and Vincent H. Crespi ...
Silicon is king in the semiconductor technology that underpins smartphones, computers, electric vehicles and more, but its ...
Researchers have long sought electrically conductive materials for economical energy-storage devices. Two-dimensional (2D) ceramics called MXenes are contenders. Unlike most 2D ceramics ...
"This work demonstrates that by stacking multiple two-dimensional (2-D) materials in random ways we can create semiconductor junctions that are as functional as those with perfect alignment" says ...
Saptarshi Das and Subir Ghosh’s research represents a major leap toward building thinner, faster and more energy-efficient ...
Researchers from the Pennsylvania State University in the United States have created the world's first computer made of ...