USF Physicists Make Nanoelectronics Breakthrough

A recent discovery in nanotechnology by University of South Florida physicists will lead to a major breakthrough in the development of graphene-based electronics. Graphene is currently the preferred material of use for manufacturing nanoelectronics because it can perform at speeds up to 100 times faster than silicon. The research of Dr. Matthias Batzill, Dr. Ivan Oleynik, graduate student Jayeeta Lahiri, undergraduate Pinar Bozkurt and postdoctorial associate You Lin was recently published in Nature Nanotechnology. Read the complete release.

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A recent discovery in nanotechnology by University of South Florida physicists will lead to a major breakthrough in the development of graphene-based electronics.

Graphene is currently the preferred material of use for manufacturing nanoelectronics because it can perform at speeds up to 100 times faster than silicon.

The research of Dr. Matthias Batzill, Dr. Ivan Oleynik, graduate student Jayeeta Lahiri, undergraduate Pinar Bozkurt and postdoctorial associate You Lin was recently published in Nature Nanotechnology.

Read the complete release.

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