Search Results - electrolyte

2 Results Sort By:
Carrier Storage Frequency Divider Using Silicon PIN Diodes (Case No. 2025-023)
Summary: Researchers in UCLA’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering have designed and fabricated an innovative device capable of frequency division at the Terahertz range, featuring low power consumption, quadrature outputs, and high sensitivity. Background: Traditional electronic and optical devices struggle to operate at the...
Published: 4/10/2025   |   Inventor(s): Sidharth Thomas, Aydin Babakhani, Benyamin Fallahi Motlagh
Keywords(s): Analogue Electronics, Antennas/Wireless, artificial electromagnetic materials, Bandwidth (Signal Processing), Bioelectromagnetics, bioelectronics, bistable electroactive polymer, Cardiac Electrophysiology, Consumer Electronics, Continuous-Wave Radar, Digital Electronics, Digital Signal Processing, Electrical Engineering, Electroactive Polymers, Electrocatalyst, electrochemical sensors, Electrode, Electrode 3D Printing, electrodeposition, electrodes, Electroencephalography, Electroencephalography (EEG), Electroencephalography Microsecond Neurofeedback, Electrolyte, electromagnetic, Electromagnetism, Electron, electron emittance, Electron Gun, Electronics & Semiconductors, energy-efficient wireless communication, Extremely High Frequency, high-frequency signals, image signal processing, Imaging, Integrated Circuit, low-power device, Optical networks, PIN Diode, power conversion efficiency, Radar, Radar / Antennae, Remote Sensing, Semiconductor, Semiconductor Device, Semiconductors, signal decoding, Signal Processing, Silicon, Synthetic aperture radar (SAR), Wireless, wireless communication, wireless connectivity, Wireless Sensor Network, wireless spectrum
Category(s): Electrical > Electronics & Semiconductors, Electrical > Electronics & Semiconductors > Circuits, Electrical, Electrical > Wireless, Electrical > Signal Processing
Electrochemical Tweezer for Electrified Solid Liquid Interface Characterization (Case No. 2024-200)
Summary: UCLA researchers in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering have developed a method for the real-time characterization of nanoscale solid-liquid interfaces present in batteries. Background: Electrified interfaces between a liquid and solid play key roles in various scientific disciplines, from ion-transfer during battery...
Published: 2/14/2025   |   Inventor(s): Yuzhang Li, Chongzhen Wang, Xintong Yuan
Keywords(s): Electrolyte, Electron Microscope, interfacial layer, material characterization, Nanoelectronics, Nanostructure
Category(s): Chemical > Instrumentation & Analysis, Electrical > Imaging