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Volume 1 Issue 11, November 2018

Electronic skins lead the way

An electronic-skin compass, which is fabricated on 6-μm-thick polymeric foils and accommodates magnetic field sensors based on the anisotropic magnetoresistance effect, allows a person to orient with respect to Earth’s magnetic field and to manipulate objects in virtual reality. The cover shows a scanning electron microscopy image of the compass under a bending radius of 200 μm.

See Makarov et al. and News & Views by Heidari

Image: Gilbert Santiago Cañón Bermúdez, Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden Rossendorf e.V. Cover Design: Allen Beattie.

Editorial

  • In pursuit of the spin transistor and alternative memory technologies.

    Editorial

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Research Highlights

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News & Views

  • Magnetic-field sensors integrated on electronic skins can provide an artificial magnetoreception that relies only on geomagnetic fields.

    • Hadi Heidari
    News & Views
  • A flexible charge-coupled device can be used to create a sensor capable of measuring the pH of a person’s sweat with high sensitivity.

    • Yiran Yang
    • Wei Gao
    News & Views
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Research

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Reverse Engineering

  • Spintronic devices, which exploit the spin of electrons for information processing and storage, are a key emerging technology in electronics. Supriyo Datta explains how emulating optical phenomena inspired his prediction of the spin transistor.

    • Supriyo Datta
    Reverse Engineering
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Amendments & Corrections

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