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Research

The latest electronics research news from within the industry and universities from around the world.

AI beats humans at drone racing

UofZurich-AI-drone-racer-beats-humans

Drone racing has joined the list of activities where AI beats humans – in multiple races against three world-class humans in this case – following research at the University of Zurich and Intel. “Physical sports are more challenging for AI because they are less predictable than board or video games,” said Zurich head of robotics and perception Davide Scaramuzza. “We ...

UK back in EU Horizon science research programme, and Copernicus, not Euratom

The UK has rejoined the European ‘Horizon’ research programme, having been a big hitter in the programme’s predecessors when the UK was part of the EU. It now has associate status in Horizon – Norway, New Zealand and Israel are already Horizon associates and, according to the UK Government, Korea and Canada are looking to join. “From today, UK researchers ...

Vote for the University Research Readers’ Choice award – Elektra 2023

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We are asking readers of Electronics Weekly to choose the winner of the University Research Project of the Year in this year’s Elektra Awards. The award is kindly sponsored by Panasonic Industry Europe. You are invited to select the research project from the last year that you feel will make the largest impact on the commercial market in the next five ...

Taming a promising, but flaky, solar perovskite

TokyoTech stablised perovskite

A cubic perovskite α-formamidinium lead iodide known as ‘α-FAPbI3‘ would be a promising solar cell material if it did not gradually turn into useless δ-FAPbI3 at room temperature under the influence of, of all things, light. Water has the same effect. “Solar cells made of α-FAPbI3 exhibit a 25.8% conversion efficiency and an energy gap of 1.48eV, specifications that are ...

Molecules offer room temperature spintronic-light interaction

UofCambridge spintronics quantumblobs

Led by the University of Cambridge, an international team of researchers has created materials in which the spin of un-paired electrons can react with photons at room temperature. “These unpaired spins change the rules for what happens when a photon is absorbed and electrons are moved up to a higher energy level. We’ve been working with systems where there is ...

2D ferroelectric memory transistor demonstrated

TokyoTech ferroelectric memory diag

Researchers at Tokyo Tech have made a lateral ferroelectric memory transistor using a 2D material. They picked α-In2Se3, which is “renowned for high carrier mobility, tunable bandgap and strong ferroelectric properties at the atomic level, making it ideal for high-speed memory applications”, according to the university. The bottom-contact transistor has been made by dropping a flake (~29nm thick) of α-In2Se3 ...

Stretchy PCBs in smart cardiac monitor, and more

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An intelligent patch for cardiac monitoring is amongst research projects built on flexible and stretchable PCBs from Würth Elektronik. There are two cardiac monitors, a mini version with three electrodes for short-term monitoring, and one with six electrodes for longer periods. “A completely new approach to integration was developed in this work,” according to Wurth. “It was based on a stretchable ...

Imec enables cost-efficient sensing of light beyond the visible

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Imec has integrated a pinned photodiode structure in thin-film image sensors. With the addition of a pinned-photogate and a transfer gate, the superior absorption qualities of thin-film imagers -beyond one µm wavelength- can finally be exploited, unlocking the potential of sensing light beyond the visible in a cost-efficient way. Detecting wavelengths beyond visible light, for instance infrared light, offers clear ...

AFRL opens Extreme Computing centre for quantum computing research

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The U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) has opened its Extreme Computing centre, as a component of national defence research – with a focus on quantum computing. Described as a state-of-the-art facility, it is located in the organisation’s Information Directorate in Rome, New York – one of the country’s premier military research facilities. The stated aim is to help provide ...

Light travels well in few-atom-thick waveguide

UChicago JiwoongPark 2d light guide photoByJeanLachat

The University of Chicago has built optical waveguides only three atoms thick using molybdenum disulphide, and found them to be an efficient way to transfer light over chip-scale distances. “We were surprised by how powerful this super-thin crystal is,” said University of Chicago professor Jiwoong Park, “not only can it hold energy, but deliver it a thousand times further than ...