Researchers 'stretch' a lackluster material into a possible electronics revolution

It's the Clark Kent of oxide compounds, and - on its own - it is pretty boring. But slice europium titanate nanometers thin and physically stretch it, and then it takes on super hero-like properties that could revolutionize electronics, according to new Cornell research. (Nature, Aug. 19, 2010.) Source: Cornell University - Discipline: Materials Science

Ferroelectric/ferromagnetic nano-structured film discovery by Cornell

August 20,2010 --Europium titanate is an unremarkable oxide compound, until sliced nanometers thin and physically stretched, according to new Cornell research. The changes affected on nano europium ...

Fri 20 Aug 10 from ElectroIQ - Small Times

Strain creates rare type of magnet

An antiferromagnetic material can display ferroelectric and ferromagnetic simultaneously if its crystal lattice is strained

Fri 20 Aug 10 from Chemistry World

Stretching Basic Material Creates Super Electricity

Slice europium titanate nanometers thin and physically stretch it, and it then takes on super hero-like properties that could revolutionize electronics.

Thu 19 Aug 10 from Laboratory Equipment

Stretching a lackluster material into a possible electronics revolution

It's the Clark Kent of oxide compounds, and--on its own--it is pretty boring. But slice europium titanate nanometers thin and physically stretch it, and then it takes on super hero-like properties ...

Thu 19 Aug 10 from R&D Mag

'Stretched' oxide gets new properties

Sliced nanometers thin and chemically stretched on a specially designed template, the oxide compound europium titanate takes on properties that could revolutionize the electronics industry.

Wed 18 Aug 10 from R&D Mag

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