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Sreeram Vaddiraju

Researcher at Texas A&M University

Publications -  57
Citations -  1893

Sreeram Vaddiraju is an academic researcher from Texas A&M University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanowire & Vapor–liquid–solid method. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 51 publications receiving 1732 citations. Previous affiliations of Sreeram Vaddiraju include University of Louisville & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Chemical Vapor Deposition of Conformal, Functional, and Responsive Polymer Films

TL;DR: CVD methods are particularly valuable for insoluble and infusible films, including fluoropolymers, electrically conductive polymers, and controllably crosslinked networks and for the potential to reduce environmental, health, and safety impacts associated with solvents.
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Method for the rapid synthesis of large quantities of metal oxide nanowires at low temperatures

TL;DR: In this article, a process for the rapid synthesis of metal oxide nanoparticles at low temperatures and methods which facilitate the fabrication of long metal oxide nanowires is described. But the method is based on treatment of metals with oxygen plasma.
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Mechanisms of 1D crystal growth in reactive vapor transport: indium nitride nanowires.

TL;DR: The direct nitridation of In droplets using dissociated ammonia results in the spontaneous nucleation and basal growth of nanowires directly from the In melt surface, which is quite different from the above-mentioned nucleation mechanism with the reactive vapor transport case.
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Near-infrared semiconductor subwavelength-wire lasers

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported near-infrared lasing in the telecommunications band in gallium antimonide semiconductor subwavelength wires for future photonic integrated circuits for telecommunications applications.
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Large-scale, hot-filament-assisted synthesis of tungsten oxide and related transition metal oxide nanowires.

TL;DR: A thermodynamic model is proposed to show that the condensation of WO(2) species primarily accounts for the nucleation and subsequent growth of the nanowires, which supports the hypothesis that the nucleations of nanowire occurs through condensing of suboxide WO (2) vapor-phase species.