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Michael Thompson

Researcher at McMaster University

Publications -  954
Citations -  31167

Michael Thompson is an academic researcher from McMaster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amorphous solid & Silicon. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 911 publications receiving 28151 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Thompson include University of Toronto & Tyndall National Institute.

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Harmonized guidelines for single-laboratory validation of methods of analysis (IUPAC Technical Report)

TL;DR: In this article, the Working Group that produced these protocols/guidelines has now been mandated by IUPAC to prepare guidelines on the single-laboratory validation of methods of analysis, providing minimum recommendations on procedures that should be employed to ensure adequate validation of analytical methods.
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A combined algorithm for genome-wide prediction of protein function

TL;DR: Proteins are grouped by correlated evolution, correlated messenger RNA expression patterns and patterns of domain fusion to determine functional relationships among the 6,217 proteins of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to discover pairwise links between functionally related yeast proteins.
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The International Harmonized Protocol for the proficiency testing of analytical chemistry laboratories (IUPAC Technical Report)

TL;DR: The International Harmonized Protocol for the Proficiency Testing of (Chemical) Analytical Laboratories (IHPT) has been revised in the light of recent developments and the experience gained since its first publication as mentioned in this paper.
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Phase transformation mechanisms involved in excimer laser crystallization of amorphous silicon films

TL;DR: In this paper, the phase transformation mechanisms and the resulting microstructures of excimer laser-induced crystallization of amorphous Si films on SiO2 were investigated, and it was shown that the process can be characterized into two major regimes, based on the dependence of the grain size and the melt duration as a function of the incident energy density.
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Melting temperature and explosive crystallization of amorphous silicon during pulsed laser irradiation

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that amorphous Si melts at a temperature at least 50 K below the crystalline value, and the initial liquid layer solidifies to form coarse-grained polycrystalline Si.