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University Electronics

The latest electronics news from UK universities

Exeter study finds phone electromagnetic radiation emissions affect fertility

A team led by Dr Fiona Mathews, of Biosciences at the University of Exeter, has been studying the potential effect of mobile phone radio-frequency electromagnetic radiation (RF-EMR) emissions on male fertility. They have conducted a review of the findings from ten previous studies. Previous research, says the university, has suggested that RF-EMR emitted by the devices can have a detrimental ...

Investigating graphene for lighter batteries in electric vehicles

Renault Zoe - electric vehicle

More from Manchester University on the graphene front. The university has announced a new project, ‘Electrochemical Energy Storage with Graphene-Enabled Materials’ which will be exploring different ways to reduce the size and weight of batteries and extend their lifespan by adding graphene as a component material”. Before such batteries can be built the researchers need to study how graphene will ...

Black and white graphene changes electronic properties

University-of-Manchester-graphene.jpg

A team led by Dr Artem Mishchenko and Sir Andre Geim from The University of Manchester have found that the electronic properties of graphene change dramatically if graphene is placed on top of boron nitride, also known as ‘white graphite’. They have published their findings in Nature Physics. The university writes: A new direction that has recently emerged in graphene ...

Edinburgh joins ranks of Intel Parallel Computing Centres

EPCC and IPCC - Intel_Xeon_Phi_PCIe_Card

We wrote back in January that Bristol University had been selected by Intel to become an Intel Parallel Computing Centre (IPCC). Now, the University of Edinburgh joins the ranks. EPCC is the supercomputing centre at Edinburgh and it will be working with Intel. The university has announced: EPCC … has been designated an Intel Parallel Computing Centre (IPCC), through a prestigious ...

Hybrid energy harvester mimics photosynthesis

Research at a number of universities – Sheffield, Southampton and Crete – is aiming to develop a new hybrid energy transfer system that mimics the processes responsible for photosynthesis. This energy transfer, writes Richard Wilson, is known as Forster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET), a radiationless transmission of energy that occurs on the nanometer scale from a donor molecule to an acceptor ...

Homomorphic Encryption paper scoops IBM Research Award

Professor Nigel Smart - Bristol University

A Professor of Cryptology in the Department of Computer Science at Bristol University has won an award from IBM Research. A paper on “Fully Homomorphic Encryption” by Bristol’s Professor Nigel Smart is the winner of the Pat Goldberg Memorial Best Paper Award, the university highlights. The citation for the paper says: This paper represents a large step forward in the ...

Multispectral light sensor detects full spectrum of light

two typical C60 nanorod photoconductor devices fabricated on a flexible PEN substrate

A new type of light sensor could support medical and security imaging, and also work with low cost cameras. This is the promise of new research at Surrey University.  The new ‘multispectral’ light sensor detects the full spectrum of light, says the university, from ultra-violet (UV) to visible and near infrared light. One application could be non-invasive medical procedures, such as ...

Samsung to talk at Manchester graphene conference

Graphene-University-of-Manchester1.jpg

Samsung’s head of graphene research will present the company’s pioneering research into synthesis of large area graphene at a major conference in Manchester in June. Seungmin Cho, principal research engineer and group leader at Samsung will present the progress his team is making in developing flexible touch screens at the upcoming Graphene Supply, Application & Commercialisation 2014, which takes place ...

Glasgow develops electronically-controlled cell patterning

Dr Mathis Riehle

A cross-disciplinary team at Glasgow University has discovered a novel, electronically-controlled method of generating dynamic cell patterns using a portable device based on acoustic force for spatial manipulation of cells and particles. The research – published by the Royal Society of Chemistry’s journal Lab on Chip – shows that cell patterning using a Heptagon Acoustic Tweezer may soon be in ...