Page 3: Research news on Transport techniques

Transport techniques are experimental methods used to measure and analyze the movement of charge carriers, mass, or energy through a medium under applied gradients or fields. In condensed matter and materials science, they encompass electrical transport measurements such as four-probe resistivity, Hall effect, magnetoresistance, and thermoelectric characterization, which quantify conductivity, carrier density, mobility, and scattering mechanisms. These techniques often involve controlling temperature, magnetic field, and sample geometry to resolve intrinsic transport coefficients and distinguish bulk from interfacial or defect-dominated contributions, thereby enabling rigorous evaluation of electronic structure, disorder, and phase transitions in materials.

A new method to evaluate thermoelectric materials

Working with one of the world's preeminent thermoelectric materials researchers, a team of researchers in the Clemson Department of Physics and Astronomy and the Clemson Nanomaterials Institute (CNI) has developed a new, ...

Spintronics: How an atom-thin insulator helps transport spins

An intermediate layer consisting of a few atoms is helping to improve the transport of spin currents from one material to another. Until now, this process involves significant losses. A team from Martin Luther University ...

Restoring touch in nerves damaged by injury

Tel Aviv University's new and groundbreaking technology inspires hope among people who have lost their sense of touch in the nerves of a limb following amputation or injury. The technology involves a tiny sensor that is implanted ...

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