Zobrazeno 1 - 2
of 2
pro vyhledávání: '"Paula Polyak Provencio"'
Autor:
Marie L. Garcia, Mary Ann Monson, Lauren Elizabeth Shea Rohwer, David M. Follstaedt, Salamone, Angelo, L., Robert Malcolm Biefeld, Harry K. Moffat, Marcia J. Pinzon, Carleton Hoover Seager, Jeffrey Yeenien Tsao, Eric Daniel Jones, Kristine Wanta Fullmer, Joel R. Wendt, Samuel Maxwell Myers, Jonathan M. Campbell, Edwin T. Southwell, Ann E. Miksovic, Mary H. Crawford, Rene Marie Gonzales, George T. Wang, Nancy A. Missert, Russell D. Elliott, Robert James Kaplar, Phillip James Cole, Jeffrey J. Figiel, Karen Charlene Cross, Randy John Shul, Carol Iris Hill Ashby, Kevin W. Boyack, Jess Patrick Wilcoxon, Andrew Alan Allerman, Nabeel M. Rahal, Brent A. Burdick, Paula Polyak Provencio, Billie Lynn Abrams, John Allen Emerson, G. Ronald Hadley, Andrew Gerhard Salinger, James Martin Gee, Steven Ross Kurtz, Robert Guild Copeland, Steven George Thoma, Michael E. Coltrin, Michael P. Moran, Jerry A. Simmons, Ariane O. Pinson, Christine C. Mitchell, Roger Patrick Pawlowski, Alan Francis Wright, Arthur J. Fischer, Katherine Huderle Andersen Bogart, Stephen R. Lee, Mark S. Allen, James Randall Creighton, Regina Lynn Simpson, David Robert Tallant, Stephen Matthew Woessner, Daniel D. Koleske, Adam K. Norman, Tom M. Bauer, Thomas M. Kerley, Weng Wah Chow, Karen Elizabeth Waldrip
This SAND report is the final report on Sandia's Grand Challenge LDRD Project 27328, 'A Revolution in Lighting -- Building the Science and Technology Base for Ultra-Efficient Solid-state Lighting.' This project, which for brevity we refer to as the S
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::22671a5a3c0bf6460aebe6a8431158fc
https://doi.org/10.2172/919202
https://doi.org/10.2172/919202
Autor:
Brian S. Swartzentruber, Julio A. Martinez, S. T. Picraux, John P. Sullivan, Paula Polyak Provencio
Publikováno v:
Journal of Applied Physics. 110:074317
We report the thermoelectric characteristics of individual p-type SiGe alloy nanowires for diameters of 100 to 300 nm and temperatures between 40 to 300 K. A technique that allows for electrical and thermal characterization on the same nanowire was d