Just how small can a QR code be? Small enough that it can only be recognized with an electron microscope. A research team at TU Wien, working together with the data storage technology company Cerabyte ...
For the first time, researchers have shown that self-assembled phosphorus chains can host genuinely one-dimensional electron ...
A research team at TU Wien and Cerabyte just shrunk the QR code to ...
Iridium oxide is one of the most important—and most problematic—materials in the global push toward clean energy. It is ...
A team of researchers at TU Wien recently announced that they have "etched" the smallest QR code ever on a ceramic film. Covering an area of ...
Transmission electron microscopes (TEMs) have been advancing our knowledge of the very small for nearly 100 years. Since their advent, they have helped scientists see structures as small as individual ...
MXenes are an emerging class of two-dimensional materials whose properties depend sensitively on the atoms bound to their surfaces. A new synthesis approach now allows researchers to control these ...
With the world’s smallest QR code, scientists from TU Wien, together with the Austrian-German startup Cerabyte, managed to ...
A new federally funded study by researchers at Duke University and the University of Pennsylvania offers an unprecedented ...
Researchers confirm phosphorus chains exhibit true one-dimensional electron behavior. Tightly packing the chains could trigger a semiconductor-to-metal transition.
Recent theoretical studies, however, had suggested that some metallic-like materials could break this record. θ-TaN, a metastable transition metal nitride, was among the most promising contenders, but ...