Arizona Institute for Nano-electronics (AINE)

Technology: Electronics

The Arizona Institute for Nano-electronics (AINE) is a coordinated network of research centers focused on ASU research in nanoelectronics, including nanophotonics, molecular electronics, nanoionics and computational nanoscience. AINE’s goal is to strongly impact future technology areas related to ultra-low power/ultra-high speed electronics, and hybrid biomolecular electronics at the interface between the biological and electronics worlds. Read More…

Arizona State University – Biodesign Institute

Technology: Life Sciences

The Biodesign Institute at ASU addresses today’s critical global challenges in healthcare, sustainability and security by developing solutions inspired from natural systems and translating those solutions into commercially viable products and clinical practices. Read More…

Arizona State University – Center for Bioelectronics and Biosensors

Technology: Various

The primary aim of the Center for Bioelectronics and Biosensors is to create powerful bioassays for point-of-care diagnostics and a variety of advanced handheld, environmental field microanalyzers. By interfacing three advanced technologies – nanomaterials, biomaterials and electronic transducers – the researchers have the ability to create enhanced biosensors and nanobioelectronics. Read More…

Arizona State University – Center for Nanotechnology in Society

Technology: Societal

Designed as a boundary organization at the interface of science and society, CNS-ASU provides an operational model for a new way to organize research through improved reflexiveness and social learning which can signal emerging problems, enable anticipatory governance, and, through improved contextual awareness, guide trajectories of NSE knowledge and innovation toward socially desirable outcomes, and away from undesirable ones. Read More…

Arizona State University – Nanophotonics Group

Technology: Photonics

The main research interest of Prof. Ning’s group is the study and development of nano-scale electronic and optoelectronic materials and devices. The research activities are focused on theory, modeling, simulation (TMS), semiconductor nanowires, and semiconductor nanophotonics. Read More…

Arizona State University – Single Molecule Biophysics

Technology: Life Sciences

The Center uses nanotechnology to study physical processes on which life is based using the simplest model systems – those that exist on the level of a single molecule or several molecules. Read More…

Arizona State University – Tao Research Group

Technology: Basic Research

Professor Nongjian Tao’s group aims to discover fundamental properties of single molecules and nanostructured materials, invent new electronic and chem- and bio-sensor devices, and develop real-world applications. Read More…

Arizona State University Nanofab

Technology: Facilitator

ASU’s NanoFab is a flexible foundry, offering state-of-the-art device processing and characterization tools to individuals and companies who need occasional or recurring access to such facilities. Read More…

University of Arizona – Dept. of Physics – Nanostructures

Technology: Basic Research

Theories of the electrical and mechanical properties of nanostructures – and how to fabricate them. Read More…