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Research

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

More on: Melexis’ tactile sensor for robot finger tips

Melexis 3D touch sensor

Aimed at robot hands and grippers, Tactaxis from Melexis is a soft tactile sensor prototype that outputs a measure of the 3D force vector acting on its surface. “This improves robots’ hands and grippers, making delicate operations such as fruit picking possible,” according to the Belgian company. Uniquely, it said, it’s gradiometric approach makes it virtually immune from stray magnetic ...

Sludge-like fluid might lead to grid-scale flow batteries

MIT sludge flow battery carbon-black

Flow batteries show promise for grid-scale storage as, like fuel cells, they decouple power output and energy storage when building a battery: the reactor is sized for power output and the surrounding tanks are sized for energy capacity. Given a low-cost working fluid and big tanks, they could store enormous amounts of energy. Seeking that low-cost fluid, MIT is proposing to ...

Intrinsic scales RRAM to 50nm

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Intrinsic Semiconductor and its partner imec have scaled Intrinsic’s RRAM technology to 50nm. Intrinsic claims that, at 50nm, the technology demonstrates ‘excellent switching behaviour’. “We are delighted to have hit this critical milestone, confirming our theoretical analysis that the devices can be made with nanoscale dimensions,” says CEO Mark Dickinson, “ this means, at last, there will be a simple ...

Elastomer electrolyte to sort out lithium metal batteries?

Gatech lithium metal elastomer electrolyte

Elastomer electrolytes might be the answer to safe lithium-metal batteries, according to researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Batteries using lithium metal anodes rather than lithium ions promise high capacities, but a tendency to grow internal cell-shorting spike-like metal dendrites makes them a risky, or even unsafe, proposition if liquid electrolytes are used. Solid inorganic or polymer electrolytes can ...

Elektra Awards 2021 – University Research Readers’ Choice Award

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Winner University of Bath   This award acknowledges the impressive projects and showcases cutting-edge UK electronics research. The University of Bath team submitted a prototype that is a miniature camera held in a silicone ear-piece. The research project that captured the most interest and votes of Electronics Weekly readers is a project by GP Dr Nick Gompertz, working with a ...

Nexeon pulls in $80m towards silicon anodes for Li-ion cells

Nexeon

Oxfordshire-based silicon anode research company Nexeon has landed a $80m investment from a consortium including SKC, SJL Partners, BNW Investment and Kiwoom Private Equity. “SKC, a $5bn market cap company, is one of Korea’s leading advanced materials companies, with a strategic focus on rechargeable battery and semiconductor materials,” according to Nexeon. “Through this transaction, Nexeon enters into a strategic partnership ...

Carbon electrode leads to 500Wh/kg lithium-air battery

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The Japanese National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) and SoftBank have developed a 500Wh/kg lithium-air battery. “Despite their very high theoretical energy densities, only a small number of lithium-air batteries with high energy densities have actually been fabricated and evaluated,” according to NIMS. “This limited success is attributed to the fact that a large proportion by weight of lithium-air battery contains ...

A piece of paper knocks the cost out of perovskite solar cell creation

Rome Zanjan paper perovskite deposition

Italian and Iranian scientists have replaced spin-coating with a simple piece of paper in a process to make perovskite solar cells. Spin coating is much like children’s spin painting, except that close control of process parameters results in the deposition of a continuous thin even film on the substrate. If aiming to deposit a poly-crystalline film of a material, the ...

MRI brain scanner does not need superconducting magnets

Hong-Kong-University

University of Hong Kong researchers have used artificial intelligence to perform a brain scan with a conventional rare-earth magnet rather than a large superconducting magnet, and without a screened room. The ‘ultra-low field magnet’ – according to MRI nomenclature – was designed using almost 90kg of samarium cobalt as its field source – used because it is less temperature sensitive ...

Tiny simple THz radiation source

TU_Wien Terahertz

Researchers at Austrian university TU Wien (Vienna) have created a simple and compact source of terahertz radiation, claiming that radiates significantly more power than similar devices: 10μW at its 525GHz fundamental and 70μW at 330GHz. There are various ways to generate terahertz waves. TU Wien lists cryogenic quantum cascade lasers for high intensities, or down-conversion by mixing multiple optical lasers, ...