Nanotechnology Research - Universities in Australia
Showing results 31 - 40 of 67 for universities in Australia:
The Centre for Advanced Materials and Industrial Chemistry (CAMIC) is a multidisciplinary centre that strives to undertake high quality fundamental and applied research. The interconnected research themes in the centre allow materials scientists, nanotechnologists and applied scientists with industrial experience to undertake ambitious research projects from conception to real world implementation.
The Centre for Atomaterials and Nanomanufacturing leads atomic-scale materials research and translation for clean energy, nanofabrication, atomic characterisation and next-generation functional materials and miniaturised devices.
The Laboratory of Artificial Intelligence Nanophotonics develops nanophotonic devices inspired by ideas from artificial intelligence and brain science for a smarter and greener future.
Current activities in the laboratory center around micro/nano-electro-mechanical-systems (MEMS/NEMS) and micro/nanofluidics.
The Centre for Micro-Photonics is an internationally leading Centre in biophotonics and nanophotonics.
Each age in human civilisation history is defined by a signature material. Developments in nanomaterials over the past 30 years has helped miniaturise and improve electronics, medicine, communications, manufacturing, and almost every aspect of our life. At the Centre for Translational Atomaterials they are searching for the next signature materials for the coming age.
The Characterisation Laboratories provide analysis platforms for optics, nanophotonics, low-dimensional materials, nanoelectronics and photovoltaic materials and devices.
Swinburne's Nanofabrication Laboratory is a multi-use nanotechnology cleanroom facility supporting nano- and micro-fabrication, device fabrication, materials processing and 3D/2D nanoscale structuring.
The University of Sydney has recently completed construction of the Sydney Nanoscience Hub - one of the most advanced research and teaching facilities globally in the field of nanoscience.
IPAS has been created to bring together experimental physicists, chemists, material scientists, biologists, experimentally driven theoretical scientists and medical researchers to create new sensing and measurement technologies.
