Investigating Use of ‘Extreme Materials’ in Electronics

Photo Credit: Phys.orgIn 2006, when Tomás Palacios completed his PhD in electrical and computer engineering at the University of California at Santa Barbara, he was torn between taking a job in academia or industry.

“I wanted to make sure that the new ideas that we were generating could find a path toward society,” says Palacios, the newly tenured Emmanuel E. Landsman Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT. “In industry, I was sure that would happen; I was not sure how it would work in academia.”

“What I found when I came here,” he says, “is that MIT is really an amazing place to get all these new ideas out and to collaborate with industry to make sure that the new concepts and new ideas coming out of the university environment find their place in real products and applications.”

According to Palacios, his research group focuses on the application of what he likes to call “extreme materials” to electronics. The 25 graduate students, postdocs and  in the group are split between two major research projects: One focuses on applications of an exotic material called ; the other on applications of graphene—a form of carbon—and other “two-dimensional materials” that consist of crystals just a few atoms thick.  READ MORE

Solantro Semiconductor Raises $10 Million for Solar PV Module Integrated Electronics

Solantro Semiconductor Corp. of Ontario, Canada today announced the completion of its Series A financing in the amount of $10 million (CAD). This funding was led by Black Coral Capital and included participation from Presidio Ventures (a Sumitomo Corporation company), Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) and Export Development Canada (EDC).

Solantro designs, manufactures and markets semiconductor chipsets and reference designs for use within distributed solar photovoltaic (PV) power conversion equipment. Solantro’s chipset-based solutions redefine the economic model for PV module manufacturers while providing for higher energy yields and significantly reduced costs, time and complexity associated with PV system design and installation. Distributed, module-integrated, power conversion solutions accelerate the global deployment of solar PV by optimising the economics of PV installations.

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