Engineers at Stanford University combined two unconventional forms of carbon—buckminsterfullerene (also known as buckyballs) and diamondoids—and came up with a small electrical component: a rectifier.
With a 1.1-mm height and 4.8 X 6.7-mm footprint, the family of miniature-packaged MOS barrier and planar Schottky rectifiers handle voltages from 20 to 100 V and currents from 3 to 12 A. All the ...
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