Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1761157> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 36 of
36
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1761157 subject Q7465670.
- Q1761157 abstract "Nanoionics is the study and application of phenomena, properties, effects and mechanisms of processes connected with fast ion transport (FIT) in all-solid-state nanoscale systems. The topics of interest include fundamental properties of oxide ceramics at nanometer length scales, and fast ion conductor (advanced superionic conductor)/electronic conductor heterostructures. Potential applications are in electrochemical devices (electrical double layer devices) for conversion and storage of energy, charge and information. The term and conception of nanoionics (as a new branch of science) were first introduced by A.L. Despotuli and V.I. Nikolaichik (Institute of Microelectronics Technology and High Purity Materials, Russian Academy of Sciences, Chernogolovka) in January 1992.There are two classes of solid state ionic nanosystems and two fundamentally different nanoionics: (I) nanosystems based on solids with low ionic conductivity, and (II) nanosystems based on advanced superionic conductors (e.g. alpha–AgI, rubidium silver iodide–family). Nanoionics-I and nanoionics-II differ from each other in the design of interfaces. The role of boundaries in nanoionics-I is the creation of conditions for high concentrations of charged defects (vacancies and interstitials) in a disordered space-charge layer. But in nanoionics-II, it is necessary to conserve the original highly ionic conductive crystal structures of advanced superionic conductors at ordered (lattice-matched) heteroboundaries. Nanoionic-I can significantly enhance (up to ~108 times) the 2D-like ion conductivity in nanostructured materials with structural coherence, but it is remaining ~103 times smaller relatively to 3D ionic conductivity of advanced superionic conductors.".
- Q1761157 wikiPageExternalLink nanoelektronika_5900.html).
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q104954.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q1075992.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q11379.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q11468.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q1428079.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q1616270.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q1672053.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q175561.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q180253.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q19052.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q212923.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q2268573.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q2415817.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q36496.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q3870170.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q4256995.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q45621.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q4648027.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q4686360.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q5250054.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q66221.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q6839202.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q6964058.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q6964059.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q6964078.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q7376098.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q7465670.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q754523.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q7877.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q899079.
- Q1761157 wikiPageWikiLink Q904857.
- Q1761157 comment "Nanoionics is the study and application of phenomena, properties, effects and mechanisms of processes connected with fast ion transport (FIT) in all-solid-state nanoscale systems. The topics of interest include fundamental properties of oxide ceramics at nanometer length scales, and fast ion conductor (advanced superionic conductor)/electronic conductor heterostructures.".
- Q1761157 label "Nanoionics".