Prof. Aksamija Comments in Prominent Science News Magazine

Prof. Zlatan Aksamija was recently quoted in a Science News story about why scientists are studying how 2-D materials such as graphene behave at high temperatures. In the February 13 edition of Science NewsAksamija said that commonly used silicon-based electronics are “hitting a brick wall” regarding how much smaller they can be manufactured, and that 2-D materials could be ideal for constructing the next generation of tiny devices:

 http://ece.umass.edu/news/aksamija-comments-prominent-science-news-magazine

Prof. Aksamija Comments in Prominent Science News Magazine

Prof. Zlatan Aksamija was recently quoted in a Science News story about why scientists are studying how 2-D materials such as graphene behave at high temperatures. In the February 13 edition of Science NewsAksamija said that commonly used silicon-based electronics are “hitting a brick wall” regarding how much smaller they can be manufactured, and that 2-D materials could be ideal for constructing the next generation of tiny devices:

 http://ece.umass.edu/news/aksamija-comments-prominent-science-news-magazine

Our vdW-TBC paper included in Nanotechnology Highlights of 2017

Cameron and NETlab alum Ela’s work on the thermal boundary conductance between van der Waals atomic layers and substrates, with impact on device applications on graphene, MoS2 and related materials, was included in Highlights of 2017, section on Energy at the Nanoscalehttp://iopscience.iop.org/journal/0957-4484/page/Highlights%202017

Our article will be free to read throughout 2018, offering unlimited access to the work.

Our vdW-TBC paper included in Nanotechnology Highlights of 2017

Cameron and NETlab alum Ela’s work on the thermal boundary conductance between van der Waals atomic layers and substrates, with impact on device applications on graphene, MoS2 and related materials, was included in Highlights of 2017, section on Energy at the Nanoscalehttp://iopscience.iop.org/journal/0957-4484/page/Highlights%202017

Our article will be free to read throughout 2018, offering unlimited access to the work.