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2D nanomaterials are a relatively populous and ever-expanding class of innovative materials with disruptive potential for different application contexts. Although for some of them, such as graphene, various possible implementations have already been explored in different application fields, others, (e.g., Mxenes), are still relatively at an infantile stage with regard to handling, stability, exploitation, processing and practical use in devices and structures with higher dimensionality.In any case, regardless of the specific nature of each of these materials, their degree of purity and structure (mono-layers/few-layers/multi-layers) and their level of maturity, they all share the same challenges since their onset, such as processing, patterning, transfer and integration in devices, allowing smart exploitation of their unique properties, incorporation in matrices of different nature for the synthesis of nano-composites, and so on.Accordingly, this book aims to showcase research papers and review articles outlining recent progress and innovative approaches for 2D nanomaterials synthesis and/or processing, preparatory to their assembly or integration into devices, microstructures, microsensors and composites for different application fields.
Technology: general issues --- graphene --- patterning --- Pt --- 2D materials --- chemical vapor deposition (CVD) --- naked-eye 3D --- microstructure --- flexible --- film --- fabrication --- biodevices --- integration --- miniaturized devices --- Si3N4 --- lubrication --- friction --- temperature rise --- photo-assisted etching --- porous silicon --- illumination --- doping level --- total current --- reflectance --- fano resonance --- plasmonic sensor --- Au/Pd --- SiC --- nanomorphology --- coalescence --- percolation --- scanning electron microscopy --- inkjet printing --- nanoparticle --- metal-organic decomposition --- silver thin film --- adhesion strength --- electrical resistivity --- monolayer MoS2 --- 10-nm nanogap --- localized surface plasmon resonance --- photoluminescence --- graphene --- patterning --- Pt --- 2D materials --- chemical vapor deposition (CVD) --- naked-eye 3D --- microstructure --- flexible --- film --- fabrication --- biodevices --- integration --- miniaturized devices --- Si3N4 --- lubrication --- friction --- temperature rise --- photo-assisted etching --- porous silicon --- illumination --- doping level --- total current --- reflectance --- fano resonance --- plasmonic sensor --- Au/Pd --- SiC --- nanomorphology --- coalescence --- percolation --- scanning electron microscopy --- inkjet printing --- nanoparticle --- metal-organic decomposition --- silver thin film --- adhesion strength --- electrical resistivity --- monolayer MoS2 --- 10-nm nanogap --- localized surface plasmon resonance --- photoluminescence
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2D nanomaterials are a relatively populous and ever-expanding class of innovative materials with disruptive potential for different application contexts. Although for some of them, such as graphene, various possible implementations have already been explored in different application fields, others, (e.g., Mxenes), are still relatively at an infantile stage with regard to handling, stability, exploitation, processing and practical use in devices and structures with higher dimensionality.In any case, regardless of the specific nature of each of these materials, their degree of purity and structure (mono-layers/few-layers/multi-layers) and their level of maturity, they all share the same challenges since their onset, such as processing, patterning, transfer and integration in devices, allowing smart exploitation of their unique properties, incorporation in matrices of different nature for the synthesis of nano-composites, and so on.Accordingly, this book aims to showcase research papers and review articles outlining recent progress and innovative approaches for 2D nanomaterials synthesis and/or processing, preparatory to their assembly or integration into devices, microstructures, microsensors and composites for different application fields.
Technology: general issues --- graphene --- patterning --- Pt --- 2D materials --- chemical vapor deposition (CVD) --- naked-eye 3D --- microstructure --- flexible --- film --- fabrication --- biodevices --- integration --- miniaturized devices --- Si3N4 --- lubrication --- friction --- temperature rise --- photo-assisted etching --- porous silicon --- illumination --- doping level --- total current --- reflectance --- fano resonance --- plasmonic sensor --- Au/Pd --- SiC --- nanomorphology --- coalescence --- percolation --- scanning electron microscopy --- inkjet printing --- nanoparticle --- metal-organic decomposition --- silver thin film --- adhesion strength --- electrical resistivity --- monolayer MoS2 --- 10-nm nanogap --- localized surface plasmon resonance --- photoluminescence --- n/a
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2D nanomaterials are a relatively populous and ever-expanding class of innovative materials with disruptive potential for different application contexts. Although for some of them, such as graphene, various possible implementations have already been explored in different application fields, others, (e.g., Mxenes), are still relatively at an infantile stage with regard to handling, stability, exploitation, processing and practical use in devices and structures with higher dimensionality.In any case, regardless of the specific nature of each of these materials, their degree of purity and structure (mono-layers/few-layers/multi-layers) and their level of maturity, they all share the same challenges since their onset, such as processing, patterning, transfer and integration in devices, allowing smart exploitation of their unique properties, incorporation in matrices of different nature for the synthesis of nano-composites, and so on.Accordingly, this book aims to showcase research papers and review articles outlining recent progress and innovative approaches for 2D nanomaterials synthesis and/or processing, preparatory to their assembly or integration into devices, microstructures, microsensors and composites for different application fields.
graphene --- patterning --- Pt --- 2D materials --- chemical vapor deposition (CVD) --- naked-eye 3D --- microstructure --- flexible --- film --- fabrication --- biodevices --- integration --- miniaturized devices --- Si3N4 --- lubrication --- friction --- temperature rise --- photo-assisted etching --- porous silicon --- illumination --- doping level --- total current --- reflectance --- fano resonance --- plasmonic sensor --- Au/Pd --- SiC --- nanomorphology --- coalescence --- percolation --- scanning electron microscopy --- inkjet printing --- nanoparticle --- metal-organic decomposition --- silver thin film --- adhesion strength --- electrical resistivity --- monolayer MoS2 --- 10-nm nanogap --- localized surface plasmon resonance --- photoluminescence --- n/a
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An original deep history of the internet that tells the story of the centuries-old utopian dreams behind it--and explains why they have died today. Many think of the internet as an unprecedented and overwhelmingly positive achievement of modern human technology. But is it? In The Internet Is Not What You Think It Is, Justin Smith offers an original deep history of the internet, from the ancient to the modern world--uncovering its surprising origins in nature and centuries-old dreams of radically improving human life by outsourcing thinking to machines and communicating across vast distances. Yet, despite the internet's continuing potential, Smith argues, the utopian hopes behind it have finally died today, killed by the harsh realities of social media, the global information economy, and the attention-destroying nature of networked technology. Ranging over centuries of the history and philosophy of science and technology, Smith shows how the "internet" has been with us much longer than we usually think. He draws fascinating connections between internet user experience, artificial intelligence, the invention of the printing press, communication between trees, and the origins of computing in the machine-driven looms of the silk industry. At the same time, he reveals how the internet's organic structure and development root it in the natural world in unexpected ways that challenge efforts to draw an easy line between technology and nature. Combining the sweep of intellectual history with the incisiveness of philosophy, The Internet Is Not What You Think It Is cuts through our daily digital lives to give a clear-sighted picture of what the internet is, where it came from, and where it might be taking us in the coming decades.
Internet. --- Technology --- Technology and civilization. --- Civilization and machinery --- Civilization and technology --- Machinery and civilization --- Civilization --- Social history --- DARPA Internet --- Internet (Computer network) --- Wide area networks (Computer networks) --- World Wide Web --- Social aspects. --- Philosophy --- Abstraction. --- Analogy. --- Analytical Engine. --- Anthropomorphism. --- Antithesis. --- Artificial general intelligence. --- Artificial intelligence. --- Artificial language. --- Artificial life. --- Artificial stupidity. --- Artificiality. --- Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. --- Automaton. --- Binary code. --- Bullying. --- Caricature. --- Causality. --- Columnist. --- Computer science. --- Computer virus. --- Computer. --- Computing. --- Consciousness. --- Conspiracy theory. --- Controversy. --- Copyright. --- Counterfeit. --- Criticism. --- Curtailment. --- Cyberculture. --- Cybernetics. --- Declamation. --- Detriment (astrology). --- Dichotomy. --- Disputation. --- Distraction. --- Doubt. --- Dystopia. --- Evocation. --- Explanation. --- External storage. --- Fantasy literature. --- Fungus. --- Heresy. --- Hypothesis. --- Imposition. --- Indictment. --- Information overload. --- Information revolution. --- Instance (computer science). --- Intellectual property. --- Internet troll. --- Irony. --- Lie. --- LinkedIn. --- Materialism. --- Naked eye. --- Negation. --- Obesity. --- Ontology (information science). --- Opportunism. --- Outsourcing. --- Overlay network. --- Perception. --- Perversion. --- Pessimism. --- Philosophy. --- Police brutality in the United States. --- Police brutality. --- Printing. --- Processing (programming language). --- Protest. --- Punched card. --- Racism. --- Radicalization. --- Reason. --- Resentment. --- Robbery. --- Scarcity (social psychology). --- Sentience. --- Simulation hypothesis. --- Simulation. --- Slang. --- Slavery. --- Slime mold. --- State of nature. --- Subject (philosophy). --- Syllogism. --- Technology. --- Telecommunication. --- Terminology. --- Theory. --- Thought. --- Tinder (app). --- Twitter. --- Uncertainty. --- Understanding. --- Vandalism. --- Virtual world. --- Writing. --- Internet --- Artificial intelligence --- history. --- History. --- PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy. --- PHILOSOPHY / History & Surveys / Modern. --- PHILOSOPHY / Social. --- COMPUTERS / Internet / Online Safety & Privacy. --- COMPUTERS / Internet / Social Media.
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