Results 211 to 220 of about 915,853 (296)
A New, Quick Method for Testing Organic Soils Based on the Electrical Impedance Spectrum of the Measuring Coil. [PDF]
Solecka B +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Molecular engineering of a nonconjugated radical polymer enables a significant enhancement of the glass transition temperature. The amorphous nature and tunability of the polymer, arising from its nonconjugated backbone, facilitates the fabrication of organic memristive devices with an exceptionally high yield (>95%), as well as substantial ...
Daeun Kim +14 more
wiley +1 more source
A Wide Dynamic Range Current Sensor Based on Torque-Mode Magnetoelectric Coupling Effect. [PDF]
Li F +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
Two‐Dimensional Materials as a Multiproperty Sensing Platform
Various sensing modalities enabled and/or enhanced by two‐dimensional (2D) materials are reviewed. The domains considered for sensing include: 1) optoelectronics, 2) quantum defects, 3) scanning probe microscopy, 4) nanomechanics, and 5) bio‐ and chemosensing.
Dipankar Jana +11 more
wiley +1 more source
Contactless Inductive Sensors Using Glass-Coated Microwires. [PDF]
Panina LV +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Unprecedented Spin‐Lifetime of Itinerant Electrons in Natural Graphite Crystals
Graphite exhibits extraordinary spintronic potential, with electron spin lifetimes reaching 1,000 ns at room temperature ‐ over 100 times longer than graphene‐based devices. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals strong anisotropy: out‐of‐plane spins live 50 times longer than their in‐plane counterparts.
Bence G. Márkus +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Optomechanical sensor network with fiber Bragg gratings. [PDF]
Yang S +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
The study explores structural and magnetic properties of one of the most recent topological quantum materials (MnBi2Te4). The Mn‐poor structure leads to stacking faults (quintuple layer ‐ QL of Bi2Te3 formation instead of a septuple layer ‐ SL of MnBi2Te4), resulting in a coexistence between weak antiferromagnetism and ferromagnetism.
Wesley F. Inoch +10 more
wiley +1 more source

