The UC Davis researchers will be
nanotechnology patents September 9th, 2008patents and current We are immensely pleased by the generous donation from DuPont, said Enrique Lavernia, dean of the College of Engineering has received collection of patents and other intellectual property from DuPont on using nanotechnology to generate electron beams. The donation will support work in the Vacuum Microelectronics group led by Charles Hunt, professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Any future royalties or licensing fees will benefit the University of California.
We know that our researchers in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. We are immensely pleased by the generous donation from DuPont, said Enrique Lavernia, dean of the College of Engineering at UC Davis. patents and current The donation includes eight granted We are immensely pleased by the generous donation from DuPont, said Enrique Lavernia, dean of the College of Engineering at UC Davis. patents and current The donation includes eight granted We are immensely pleased by the generous donation from DuPont, said Enrique Lavernia, dean of the College of Engineering at UC Davis.
patents and current patent applications on fieldemission vacuum microelectronics multiple foreign patents and pending applications other company technical information support equipment and funds to support graduate student research in Hunts laboratory. Hunts laboratory applies nanotechnology to build tiny structures, hundreds of times smaller than the thickness of human hair, that can confine enormous electric fields in very small volume of material. These fieldemission devices have numerous emerging applications ranging from highefficiency lighting to novel biomedical devices, nanoscopic xray sources, cathode ray tubes and microwave devices, Hunt said.
patents and current It allows us to build on this gift. Media contactsAndy Fell, UC Davis News Service, 530 7524533, ahfellucdavis. eduReturn to the previous page. We are immensely pleased by the generous donation from DuPont, said Enrique Lavernia, dean of the College of Engineering at UC Davis. The UC Davis researchers will be able to develop and add to the existing patents and license them to other companies or to startup companies spun off from UC Davis.
patent applications on fieldemission vacuum microelectronics multiple foreign patents and pending applications other company technical information support equipment and funds to support graduate student research in Hunts laboratory. The donation will support work in the Vacuum Microelectronics group led by Charles These fieldemission devices have numerous emerging applications ranging from highefficiency lighting to novel biomedical devices, nanoscopic xray sources, cathode ray tubes and microwave devices, Hunt said. Any future royalties or licensing fees will benefit the University of California. Hunt, professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering are poised to build on this gift.
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