R & D Magazine |
Scalable Printing Sensors and Electronics at the Nanoscale
R & D Magazine Inkjet, screen-printing, and gravure printing are technologies that are commercially used for printing electronics, flexible displays, and RFID tags. However, currently only the RFID antennas and interconnects are printed; the chips are made using … |
Tag: electronics
Police: Man used knife to rob electronics store – WKBW-TV
WKBW-TV |
Police: Man used knife to rob electronics store
WKBW-TV Amherst Police say 29-year-old Justin Arnold robbed an electronics store on Main Street in Eggertsville Thursday afternoon. The store clerk called police around 1 p.m. and told them Arnold brandished a large knife before taking off with an undetermined … |
Edmonds CC to offer free electronics, paper recycling March 10 – My Edmonds News
My Edmonds News |
Edmonds CC to offer free electronics, paper recycling March 10
My Edmonds News “Mercury, lead, cadmium, and other hazardous and toxic material can be found in electronic waste,” said Stewart Sinning, program manager for the Edmonds CC Center for Service Learning, “and, in 2009, the Environmental Protection Agency reported that … |
Edible electronics are on the way – Cosmos
Cosmos |
Edible electronics are on the way
Cosmos Ongoing research is working to exploit its properties in diverse applications such as tissue engineering, water filtration, solar cells and glass-based electronics. As described in a study published in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano, a … |
Scientists Turn Toast Into Edible Graphene Electronics – Genius Kitchen (blog)
Genius Kitchen (blog) |
Scientists Turn Toast Into Edible Graphene Electronics
Genius Kitchen (blog) Graphene is more conductive than copper, and can be used to create radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags that are able to communicate with receivers in many popular consumer electronics. “Very often, we don't see the advantage of something until … |
Edible electronics tattooed on your food could help track your health – MIT Technology Review
MIT Technology Review |
Edible electronics tattooed on your food could help track your health
MIT Technology Review By contrast, materials scientists have made much recent progress in developing conducting polymers that can be inkjet-printed into powerful electronic devices such as plastic displays. Bonacchini and company use the same inkjet-printing technique to … |