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David A. Muller

Researcher at Cornell University

Publications -  661
Citations -  54804

David A. Muller is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Scanning transmission electron microscopy & Electron energy loss spectroscopy. The author has an hindex of 99, co-authored 605 publications receiving 45453 citations. Previous affiliations of David A. Muller include University of Sydney & Alcatel-Lucent.

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One-dimensional electrical contact to a two-dimensional material.

TL;DR: In graphene heterostructures, the edge-contact geometry provides new design possibilities for multilayered structures of complimentary 2D materials, and enables high electronic performance, including low-temperature ballistic transport over distances longer than 15 micrometers, and room-tem temperature mobility comparable to the theoretical phonon-scattering limit.
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Superconducting Interfaces Between Insulating Oxides

TL;DR: This work reports on superconductivity in the electron gas formed at the interface between two insulating dielectric perovskite oxides, LaAlO3 and SrTiO3.
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Grains and grain boundaries in highly crystalline monolayer molybdenum disulphide

TL;DR: In this paper, single-crystal islands and polycrystals containing tilt and mirror twin grain boundaries are characterized, and the influence of the grain boundaries on the material properties of molybdenum disulphide is assessed.
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Grains and grain boundaries in single-layer graphene atomic patchwork quilts

TL;DR: This work determines the location and identity of every atom at a grain boundary and finds that different grains stitch together predominantly through pentagon–heptagon pairs, and reveals an unexpectedly small and intricate patchwork of grains connected by tilt boundaries.
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Structurally ordered intermetallic platinum–cobalt core–shell nanoparticles with enhanced activity and stability as oxygen reduction electrocatalysts

TL;DR: A new class of Pt-Co nanocatalysts composed of ordered Pt(3)Co intermetallic cores with a 2-3 atomic-layer-thick platinum shell with high activity and stability are described, providing a new direction for catalyst performance optimization for next-generation fuel cells.