Below are excerpts of the latest Microelectronics news found online, copyrighted and direct link to their respective authors. Found, selected, and sorted. Any problem or additional source you would like to include here, please contact us.
- EU and South Korea to make a new Horizon Europe partnership Embracing a new era of innovation, The European Commission and South Korea are engaged in talks to establish a Horizon Europe Partnership, a collaboration in the EU's €95.5 billion research and innovation program. The post EU and South Korea to make a new Horizon Europe partnership appeared first on Open...
- Conventional looms produce unconventional textiles A next-generation smart textile produced with the same machines used to make the clothing we wear every day. Photo: Sanghyo Lee.Researchers have developed next-generation smart textiles – incorporating LEDs, sensors, energy harvesting and storage – that can be produced inexpensively, in any shape or size, using the same machines used...
- STMicroelectronics Protects Power Conversion and Gate Driving Geneva. A new customized 10W isolated-buck IC from STMicroelectronics has been released to protect power conversion and gate driving in IGBTs, SiC, and GaN transistors. The L6983i includes low quiescent current and 3.5V-38V input-voltage range....
- Stormy finding in 2D ferromagnet This simulation captures the different swirling textures of skyrmions and merons observed in a ferromagnet thin film. Image by the University of Edinburgh, UK, based on microscopy images collected by Argonne on samples prepared at MagLab.Microelectronics forms the foundation of much modern technology today, including smartphones, laptops and even supercomputers....
- NINA la Vida The NINA-B306 Thing Plus is here along with two new AI single-board computers from NVIDIA!...
- A Tag as Dynamic Wouldn't Sense as Sweet The Qwiic Dynamic NFC/RFID Tag graduates to reds and the AWS IoT ExpressLink SARA-R5 Starter Kit gets a new version....
- Graphene locks onto topological qubit The formation of a heterostructure of layered two-dimensional materials, envisioned as Lego-type blocks locking together. Image: Elizabeth Floresgomez Murray.According to an international team of researchers, a new form of heterostructure made from layered two-dimensional (2D) materials may overcome key barriers to the widespread application of quantum computing. The researchers were...
- Road to embedded world '23: Plan-les-Ouates, Switzerland, STMicroelectronic... “Today we are unveiling the world’s first MCU AI Developer Cloud, which works hand-in-glove with our STM32Cube.AI ecosystem. This new tool brings the possibility to remotely benchmark models on STM32 hardware through the cloud to save on workload and cost” said Ricardo De Sa Earp, Executive Vice President General-Purpose Microcontroller...
- Halo Microelectronics introduces a new Li-Ion and Li-Pol battery charger with au... Halo Microelectronics, a maker of analog and power management integrated circuits enabling energy-efficient smart systems, announces the release of its HL7040C, a highly integrated family of 2×2 mm single-cell Li-Ion and Li-Pol linear charger. The HL7040C is suitable for portable applications, including smartphones, PDAs, MP3 players, and low-powered handheld devices...
- ‘Magic’ solvent creates stronger polymer coatings This micrograph image shows a coating produced by the novel chemical vapor deposition technique. Image: Cornell University.Researchers at Cornell University have developed a new all-dry polymerization technique that uses reactive vapors to create thin films with enhanced properties such as mechanical strength, kinetics and morphology. This synthesis process is gentler...
- Hot carriers cause perovskite lattice to straighten up Wenbin Li (left) and Aditya Mohite (right) in their laboratory at Rice University. Photo: Rice University.Researchers at Rice University already knew that the atoms in perovskites react favorably to light. Now, they can see precisely how those atoms move in perovskites. This breakthrough in visualization supports their efforts to squeeze...
- Microelectronics give researchers a remote control for biological robots By Liz Ahlberg Touchstone First, they walked. Then, they saw the light. Now, miniature biological robots have gained a new trick: remote control. The hybrid “eBiobots” are the first to combine soft materials, living muscle and microelectronics, said researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Northwestern University and collaborating institutions....