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Linköping University (LiU)

Linköping University (LiU)

Linköping University (in Swedish: Linköpings universitet, LiU) is a state university in Linköping, Sweden.

Electrically conductive “soil” for hydroponics can increase barley growth by 50 percent

How about growing electrodes in the brain?

Passive radiative cooling gains electronic temperature control

The first perovskite solar cell with a commercially viable lifetime can perform above industry standards for around 30 years

A nerve cell that can be integrated with a living plant and an artificial organic synapse

A sustainable system for energy storage based on cheap organic and water-based electrolytes

The roots of a plant can become electrically conducting and store energy just by watering with conjugated oligomers

Electronic paper able to display brilliant colors seems ready for commercial use

Practical semiconductor spintronics breakthrough

Solar energy storage: storing sunlight in a molecule

A cheap and eco-friendly steam generator to desalinate and purify water using sunlight

An artificial neural network can find disease-related genes

Imagine a material that can increase or decrease by 100 times when a weak electrical signal is applied

Researchers at the Laboratory of Organic Electronics have discovered a material that can both increase and reduce its volume when exposed to a weak electrical pulse. In a sponge, or filter, the researchers can control the size of particles that pass through. Materials, such as solids and gels, that change volume depending on temperature or

Imagine a material that can increase or decrease by 100 times when a weak electrical signal is applied

Implanting electronic devices into tobacco plants to make them drought resistant

Eleni Stavrinidou and her research group at the Laboratory of Organic Electronics, Linköping University, have used bioelectronics to influence transpiration in a tobacco plant, without harming the plant in any way. Research in the Electronic Plants group at the Laboratory of Organic Electronics, Campus Norrköping, follows two main avenues. In one, scientists incorporate electronic circuits

Implanting electronic devices into tobacco plants to make them drought resistant

Indoor solar cells to power the internet of things

Swedish and Chinese scientists have developed organic solar cells optimised to convert ambient indoor light to electricity. The power they produce is low, but is probably enough to feed the millions of products that the internet of things will bring online. As the internet of things expands, it is expected that we will need to

Indoor solar cells to power the internet of things

Simulating quantum computer properties in a classical computer to help build quantum computers

Scientists at Linköping University have shown how a quantum computer really works and have managed to simulate quantum computer properties in a classical computer. “Our results should be highly significant in determining how to build quantum computers”, says Professor Jan-Åke Larsson. The dream of superfast and powerful quantum computers has again been brought into focus,

Simulating quantum computer properties in a classical computer to help build quantum computers

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