Solution synthesis of nanostructured transition metal chalcogenides and their electrical and thermal properties

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2019-01-01
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Zheng, Wei
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Yue Wu
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Chemical and Biological Engineering

The function of the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering has been to prepare students for the study and application of chemistry in industry. This focus has included preparation for employment in various industries as well as the development, design, and operation of equipment and processes within industry.Through the CBE Department, Iowa State University is nationally recognized for its initiatives in bioinformatics, biomaterials, bioproducts, metabolic/tissue engineering, multiphase computational fluid dynamics, advanced polymeric materials and nanostructured materials.

History
The Department of Chemical Engineering was founded in 1913 under the Department of Physics and Illuminating Engineering. From 1915 to 1931 it was jointly administered by the Divisions of Industrial Science and Engineering, and from 1931 onward it has been under the Division/College of Engineering. In 1928 it merged with Mining Engineering, and from 1973–1979 it merged with Nuclear Engineering. It became Chemical and Biological Engineering in 2005.

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1913 - present

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  • Department of Chemical Engineering (1913–1928)
  • Department of Chemical and Mining Engineering (1928–1957)
  • Department of Chemical Engineering (1957–1973, 1979–2005)
    • Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering (2005–present)

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Chemical and Biological Engineering
Abstract

With the development of electronic devices, more electrical units need to squeeze into small packages. As a result, more heat energy will be produced in the same area and thermal management has become a more critical issue for the design of electrical devices. One protection method is to integrate the thermal switch into an electrical device, and it will cut off current when the temperature is above the operating temperature range. There are significant gaps that must be overcome before the thermal switch can be integrated into an electrical device. The performance requirements include low resistance under normal operation to reduce power consumption while turning into high resistance at the critical condition to cut off or reduce the current. It also should be self-recoverable after cooling down and have a low production cost.

This dissertation first describes a solution-phase synthesis of iron telluride nanostructures with reversible and reproducible switching behavior between p- and n-type conduction. A proof-of-concept thermally triggered p-n diode has been demonstrated. This device has a large electrical conductivity during normal operation which can minimize power consumption. While at high temperature, it will be triggered to a p-n diode with a fast response time to temperature rising. Secondly, a large-scale solution-phase synthesis method to synthesize silver telluride based on tellurium nanowire template has also been developed. Its structural phase transition can be realized by temperature- or electrically-driven method. In addition, the threshold DC voltage is less than 1 V and can result in a sharp drop in conductance. Lastly, A new electromagnetic sensor prototype is presented by sintering electromagnetic absorption material and phase change material together. The electromagnetic absorption material will absorb electromagnetic wave in the X band and increase temperature.

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Wed May 01 00:00:00 UTC 2019