Worldwide, discarded electronic toys, computers and smartphones are becoming an increasingly significant source of electronic ...
(Nanowerk News) For many years, Thomas Geiger has been conducting research in the field of cellulose fibrils – fine fibers that can be produced from wood pulp or agricultural waste, for example.
The idea proposed by the team involves creating what they describe as a temporal circuit board—it would be made using ultracold atoms that move around in repeating patterns similar in form to those ...
Arguably the greatest engineering challenge in quantum computing is addressing these systems’ predilection for errors. Now, a new study from scientists from Australia and Poland says that creating a ...
While we all love technology that makes life easier, the waste created from cast-off devices is doing the Earth no favors. E-waste is the fastest growing category of domestic trash, with over 50 ...
With demand booming for printed circuit boards, the U.S. government is trying to boost domestic production to move away from reliance on China.
Ultracold atoms that constantly move in repeating patterns, in a form of matter called a time crystal, could be used to build quantum computers that produce fewer errors. In conventional computers, ...