Category: NNI-NEWS

  • Detecting defects in tomorrowโ€™s technology: Study enhances understanding of likely candidate for next-generation chips

    (Funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy)
    Researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory and the University of Delaware have provided new insights into the variations that can occur in the atomic structure of two-dimensional materials called transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). The researchers found that one of the defects, which involves hydrogen, provides excess electrons. The other type of defect, called a chalcogen vacancy, is a missing atom of oxygen, sulfur, selenium, or tellurium. By shining light on the TMD, the researchers showed unexpected frequencies of light coming from the TMD, which could be explained by the movement of electrons related to the chalcogen vacancy.

  • Single atoms show their true color

    (Funded by the U.S. Department of Defense)
    Researchers at Michigan State University have developed a new technique that combines atomic-scale imaging with extremely short laser pulses to detect single-atom defects that manufacturers add to semiconductors to tune their electronic performance. โ€œThis is particularly relevant for components with nanoscale structures,โ€ said Tyler Cocker, a scientist who led this study. The technique is straightforward to implement with the right equipment, he added, and his team is already applying it to atomically thin materials, such as graphene nanoribbons.

  • Faster charge transfer mechanism could lead to better energy conversion devices

    (Funded by the National Science Foundation)
    Researchers from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have identified how gold nanoparticles transfer charge to a connecting semiconductor and quantified how much charge is transferred using different colors of light. The researchers theorized that by using light to excite collective electronic oscillations (also called a plasmon) in gold nanoparticles, they would get a boost in charge transfer to the semiconductor material. And their study confirmed their theory.

  • Mapping the Surfaces of MXenes, Atom by Atom, Reveals New Potential for the 2D Materials

    (Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy)
    Researchers from Drexel University, California State University Northridge, and the U.S. Department of Energyโ€™s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have provided the first clear look at the chemical structure of the surface of a two-dimensional (2D) material called titanium carbide MXene. MXenes form a family of 2D materials that have shown promise for water desalination, energy storage, and electromagnetic shielding. “Getting the first atomic-scale look at their surface, using scanning tunneling microscopy, is an exciting development that will open new possibilities for controlling the material surface and enabling applications of MXenes in advanced technologies,โ€ said Yury Gogotsi, the researcher who led this study.

  • Purdue researchers fabricate ultrastrong aluminum alloys for additive manufacturing

    (Funded by the U.S. Department of Defense and the National Science Foundation)
    Researchers from Purdue University and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have created a process to develop ultrahigh-strength aluminum alloys that are suitable for additive manufacturing. The researchers produced the aluminum alloys by using several transition metals, including cobalt, iron, nickel and titanium. “These intermetallics have crystal structures with low symmetry and are known to be brittle at room temperature,” said Anyu Shang, one of the researchers involved in this study. “But our method forms the transitional metal elements into colonies of nanoscale, intermetallics lamellae that aggregate into fine rosettes. The nanolaminated rosettes can largely suppress the brittle nature of intermetallics.”