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James Hone

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  702
Citations -  128248

James Hone is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Graphene & Monolayer. The author has an hindex of 127, co-authored 637 publications receiving 108193 citations. Previous affiliations of James Hone include DARPA & Santa Fe Institute.

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Reducing contact resistance of macro-scale separable electrical contacts with single-layer graphene coatings

TL;DR: In this article, single-layer graphene was used as a protective coating for copper connectors to mitigate corrosion and improve electrical contact performance, and the electrical contact resistance was two orders of magnitude lower than the contact resistance of the bare copper.
Posted Content

Nanoscale Optical Imaging of 2D Semiconductor Stacking Orders by Exciton-Enhanced Second Harmonic Generation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrate near-field SHG imaging of 2D semiconductors and heterostructures with the spatial resolution down to 20 nm using a scattering-type nano-optical apparatus.

Evidence for Exciton Crystals in a 2D Semiconductor Heterotrilayer

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors present spectroscopic evidences for ordered interlayer excitons in a WSe2/MoSe 2/WSe2 trilayer, where the enhanced Coulomb interactions over those in heterobilayers have been predicted to result in exciton ordering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Negative refraction in hyperbolic hetero-bicrystals

TL;DR: Hu et al. as mentioned in this paper visualized negative refraction of phonon polaritons, which occurs at the interface between two natural crystals and showed that polariton eigenmodes display regions of both positive and negative dispersion interrupted by multiple gaps that result from polaritonic-level repulsion and strong coupling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of cardiomyocyte adhesion and mechanosignalling through distinct nanoscale behaviour of integrin ligands mimicking healthy or fibrotic extracellular matrix

TL;DR: Investigation of cardiomyocyte integrin/ligand combinations using a combination of uniformly coated surfaces with defined stiffness, polydimethylsiloxane nanopillars, micropatterning and specifically designed bionanoarrays found that the adhesion nanoscale organization, signalling and traction force generation of neonatal ratCardiomyocytes are strongly dependent on the integrin-ligand combination.