University of Michigan Researchers Engineer Magnetic Complexity Into Atomically Thin Magnets
December 03, 2021
December 03, 2021
ANN ARBOR, Michigan, Dec. 3 (TNSJou) -- The University of Michigan issued the following news release:
Magnets are used in so many of our everyday objects including cell phones and in the strip of a credit card or a hotel key. They even power the engine in your vacuum.
And as most computers use magnets to store information, finding ever thinner magnets is key to faster, lighter electronics. Graphene, a material that is one atom thick, was discovered in 2004 and won the 2 . . .
Magnets are used in so many of our everyday objects including cell phones and in the strip of a credit card or a hotel key. They even power the engine in your vacuum.
And as most computers use magnets to store information, finding ever thinner magnets is key to faster, lighter electronics. Graphene, a material that is one atom thick, was discovered in 2004 and won the 2 . . .