60th Electronic Materials Conference (EMC)
DESCRIPTION
The Electronic Materials Conference (EMC) is the premier annual forum on the preparation and characterization of electronic materials. The 2018 Conference, to be held June 27-29 at the University of California, Santa Barbara, immediately follows the Device Research Conference and will feature a plenary session, parallel topical sessions, a poster session and an industrial exhibition. Mark your calendar today and plan to attend.
Topics:
- Energy Conversion and Storage Materials
- Photovoltaics—Organic and Hybrid
- Solar Cell Materials and Devices
- Chalcopyrite Semiconductors and Devices
- Thermoelectrics and Thermal Transport
- Energy Harvesting
- Electrochemical Energy Storage and Conversion
- Wide Bandgap Semiconductors
- Group III-Nitrides—Growth, Processing, Characterization, Theory and Devices
- Silicon Carbide—Growth, Processing, Characterization, Theory and Devices
- Oxide Semiconductors and Dielectrics
- Gallium Oxide
- Oxide Semiconductors—Growth, Doping, Defects, Nanostructures and Devices
- Dielectrics and Multifunctional Oxides
- Electronic Materials Science and Technology
- Computational Electronic Materials
- Phase Change Materials
- Point Defects, Doping and Extended Defects
- Embedded Nanoparticles and Nanocomposite Films
- Metamaterials and Materials for THz, Plasmonics and Polaritons
- Epitaxial Materials and Devices
- Narrow Bandgap Materials and Devices
- Contacts to Semiconductor Epilayers, Nanostructures and Organic Films
- Materials Integration
- Nano-Magnetic, Magnetic Memory and Spintronic Materials
- Materials for Memory and Computation
- Transparent Conductors
- Nanoscale Science and Technology
- Graphene, BN, MoS2 and Other 2D Materials and Devices
- Nanowires and Nanotubes—Growth, Processing, Characterization and Devices
- Low-Dimensional Structures—Quantum Dots, Wires and Wells
- Nanoscale Characterization—Scanning Probes, Electron Microscopy and Other Techniques
- Organic Materials and Thin-Film Technology
- Electronic Materials for Bio
- Organic Devices and Molecular Electronics
- Flexible, Printed and/or Dissolvable Thin Films or Nanomembranes