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Featured researches published by Samiul Haque.


Proceedings of the IEEE | 2012

Flexible Electronics: The Next Ubiquitous Platform

Arokia Nathan; Arman Ahnood; Matthew T. Cole; Sungsik Lee; Yuji Suzuki; Pritesh Hiralal; Francesco Bonaccorso; Tawfique Hasan; Luis Garcia-Gancedo; Andriy Dyadyusha; Samiul Haque; Piers Andrew; Stephan Hofmann; James Moultrie; Daping Chu; Andrew J. Flewitt; A. C. Ferrari; M. J. Kelly; J. Robertson; G.A.J. Amaratunga; W. I. Milne

Thin-film electronics in its myriad forms has underpinned much of the technological innovation in the fields of displays, sensors, and energy conversion over the past four decades. This technology also forms the basis of flexible electronics. Here we review the current status of flexible electronics and attempt to predict the future promise of these pervading technologies in healthcare, environmental monitoring, displays and human-machine interactivity, energy conversion, management and storage, and communication and wireless networks.


ACS Nano | 2011

Self-aligned coupled nanowire transistor.

T. S. Kulmala; Alan Colli; A. Fasoli; A. Lombardo; Samiul Haque; A. C. Ferrari

The integration of multiple functionalities into individual nanoelectronic components is increasingly explored as a means to step up computational power, or for advanced signal processing. Here, we report the fabrication of a coupled nanowire transistor, a device where two superimposed high-performance nanowire field-effect transistors capable of mutual interaction form a thyristor-like circuit. The structure embeds an internal level of signal processing, showing promise for applications in analogue computation. The device is naturally derived from a single NW via a self-aligned fabrication process.


virtual reality international conference | 2012

Electrotactile touch surface by using transparent graphene

Zoran Radivojevic; Paul Beecher; Christopher Bower; Samiul Haque; Piers Andrew; Tawfique Hasan; Francesco Bonaccorso; A. C. Ferrari; Brian Henson

In this work we present a flexible Electrostatic Tactile (ET) surface/display realized by using new emerging material graphene. The graphene is transparent conductor which successfully replaces previous solution based on indium-thin oxide (ITO) and delivers more reliable solution for flexible and bendable displays. The electrostatic tactile surface is capable of delivering programmable, location specific tactile textures. The ET device has an area of 25 cm2, and consists of 130 μm thin optically transparent (>76%) and mechanically flexible structure overlaid unobtrusively on top of a display. The ET system exploits electro vibration phenomena to enable on-demand control of the frictional force between the users fingertip and the device surface. The ET device is integrated through a controller on a mobile display platform to generate fully programmable range of stimulating signals. The ET haptic feedback is formed in accordance with the visual information displayed underneath, with the magnitude and pattern of the frictional force correlated with both the images and the coordinates of the actual touch in real time forming virtual textures on the display surface (haptic virtual silhouette). To quantify rate of change in friction force we performed a dynamic friction coefficient measurement with a system involving an artificial finger mimicking the actual touch. During operation, the dynamic friction between the ET surface and an artificial finger stimulation increases by 26% when the load is 0.8 N and by 24% when the load is 1 N.


Smart Materials and Structures | 2014

Fully-integrated piezoelectric generators from flexible materials

Alan Colli; Richard M. White; Samiul Haque; Pritesh Hiralal

This paper presents a flexible, integrated piezoelectric system that is simultaneously designed to operate as a self-powered touch sensor and as a charge pump and storage device for the long-term accumulation of energy over several pressure cycles. Rectification is achieved by stacking a piezoresistive polymer on top of a piezoelectric polymer, so that the conductivity of the former switches in phase with the generation of charge in the latter, upon application and release of stress. A thin flexible electrochemical capacitor is then stacked onto the structure to store the generated charge. The resulting integrated generator proves a robust device of general applicability, featuring a flexible and deformable nature, a large dynamic range, and simple manufacturing.


Archive | 2012

Apparatus and associated methods

Zoran Radivojevic; Paul Beecher; Chris Bower; Piers Andrew; Darryl Cotton; Samiul Haque


ACS Nano | 2013

Ultrafast Graphene Oxide Humidity Sensors

Stefano Borini; Richard M. White; Di Wei; Michael Astley; Samiul Haque; Elisabetta Spigone; Nadine Harris; Jani Kivioja; Tapani Ryhänen


Sensors and Actuators A-physical | 2014

Highly reproducible printable graphite strain gauges for flexible devices

Alexander Bessonov; Marina Nikolaevna Kirikova; Samiul Haque; Ilya Gartseev; Marc Bailey


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013

Ultrathin rechargeable all-solid-state batteries based on monolayer graphene

Di Wei; Samiul Haque; Piers Andrew; Jani Kivioja; Tapani Ryhänen; Amaia Pesquera; Alba Centeno; Beatriz Alonso; Andrey Chuvilin; Amaia Zurutuza


Archive | 2010

GRAPHENE DEVICE AND METHOD OF FABRICATING A GRAPHENE DEVICE

Asta Kärkkäinen; Samiul Haque; Alan Colli; Pirjo Pasanen; Leo Kärkkäinen; Mikko A. Uusitalo; Reijo Lehtiniemi


Nanoscale | 2016

Mechanically robust 39 GHz cut-off frequency graphene field effect transistors on flexible substrates.

Wei Wei; E. Pallecchi; Samiul Haque; Stefano Borini; Vanessa Avramovic; Alba Centeno; Zurutuza Amaia; H. Happy

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