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Eric Garfunkel

Researcher at Rutgers University

Publications -  222
Citations -  14512

Eric Garfunkel is an academic researcher from Rutgers University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oxide & Silicon. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 213 publications receiving 13252 citations. Previous affiliations of Eric Garfunkel include Fudan University & University of Paris.

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Evolution of Electrical, Chemical, and Structural Properties of Transparent and Conducting Chemically Derived Graphene Thin Films

TL;DR: A detailed description of the electronic properties, chemical state, and structure of uniform single and few-layered graphene oxide (GO) thin films at different stages of reduction is reported in this paper.
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Ultrathin (<4 nm) SiO2 and Si-O-N gate dielectric layers for silicon microelectronics: Understanding the processing, structure, and physical and electrical limits

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized recent progress and current scientific understanding of ultrathin (<4 nm) SiO2 and Si-O-N (silicon oxynitride) gate dielectrics on Si-based devices.
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Effect of nitrogen on band alignment in HfSiON gate dielectrics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the band alignment of HfSiO and hfSiON films by soft x-ray photoemission, oxygen K-edge xray absorption, and spectroscopic ellipsometry.
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Photochemical Water Oxidation by Crystalline Polymorphs of Manganese Oxides: Structural Requirements for Catalysis

TL;DR: Eight synthetic oxide structures containing Mn(III) and Mn(IV) only are compared, with particular emphasis on the five known structural polymorphs of MnO2, to explore the significance of atomic positions on the catalytic efficiency of water oxidation.
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Electrolyte design for LiF-rich solid–electrolyte interfaces to enable high-performance microsized alloy anodes for batteries

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors developed an electrolyte strategy to enable the use of commercially available microsized alloys, such as Si-Li, as high-performance battery anodes, and demonstrated that a rationally designed electrolyte (2.0 M LiPF6 in 1:1 v/v mixture of tetrahydrofuran and 2-methyltetrahydroidfuran) enables 100 cycles of full cells that contain microsized Si, Al and Bi anodes with commercial LiFePO4 and LiNi0.8Co