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Electronic, Photonic and Quantum Materials
Electronic and photonic materials constitute a research area that has the potential to address many of the grand challenges facing society and the environment.
This work includes better diagnostic tools, creating better chemical and gas sensors and other novel electronic and photonic technologies.
Duke researchers are developing new materials and imagining new applications for existing technologies.
Centers and Laboratories
- AFLOW: Automatic-FLOW for Materials Discovery
- Center for Autonomous Materials Design
- Center for Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Semiconductors for Energy
- Center for Synthesizing Quantum Coherence
- Computational Materials Science Group
- Fitzpatrick Institute for Photonics
- Haravifard Group—Quantum Materials
- Microelectronics, Photonics, and Nanotechnology (MPN) Group
- Nanomaterials and Thin Films Lab
- Shared Materials Instrumentation Facility (SMIF)
- Center for the Chemistry of Molecularly Optimized Networks (MONET)