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Carbon Nanotube Devices:

Properties, Modeling, Integration and Applications
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Christofer Hierold
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John Wiley & Sons, May 5, 2008 - Technology & Engineering - 363 pages
Following on from the first AMN volume, this handy reference and textbook examines the topic of nanosystem design in further detail. It explains the physical and chemical basics behind the design and fabrication of nanodevices, covering all important, recent advances in the field, while introducing nanosystems to less experienced readers.
The result is an important source for a fast, accurate overview of the state of the art of nanosystem realization, summarizing further important literature.
  

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Contents

Carbon Nanotubes in Microelectronic Applications
12
Electromechanical Carbon Nanotube Transducers
43
Carbon Nanotube Direct Integration into Microsystems
83
Characterization of Carbon Nanotubes by Optical Spectroscopy
125
Modeling the Properties of Carbon Nanotubes for SensorBased
181
Multiscale Modeling and Simulation for Fluid Mechanics at
229
Carbon Nanotube Field Emission Devices
291
Carbon Nanotube Gas Sensors
321
Index
351

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From Google Scholar

Site-selective conductance of sidewall functionalized carbon nanotubes
Juan María García-Lastra, Kristian S Thygesen, Mikkel Strange, Ángel Rubio

About the author (2008)

Christofer Hierold holds the Chair of Micro- and Nanosystems at the ETH in Zurich, Switzerland, since April 2002. Prior to that, he spent eleven years with Siemens AG and Infineon Technologies AG, responsible for R&D on microsystems, advanced CMOS processes, memories, nanoelectronics and new materials. His current research work focuses on the evaluation of new materials for MEMS, on advanced microsystems and on nanotransducers.
Professor Hierold holds numerous patents and has published over 20 research articles in peer reviewed journals and international conference proceedings. He serves on the program committees of several scientific conferences such as the IEEE MEMS series.

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