CLEVELAND, Oct. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- Keithley Instruments, Inc.
(NYSE: KEI), a world leader in advanced electrical test instruments
and systems, extends its congratulations to Drs. Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, scientists at the
University of Manchester in
England who were just awarded the
2010 Nobel Prize in Physics for their research on graphene, a
single-atom-thick form of carbon with outstanding physical,
electrical, and chemical properties. In their research, Geim and
Novoselov employed several Keithley Instruments products, including
the Model 2400 SourceMeter® instrument and the Model 2182A
Nanovoltmeter.
Mark Hoersten, Keithley's vice
president, marketing, noted, "It has given everyone here enormous
satisfaction to know that our products have been a part of a
ground-breaking research effort like this one. Coincidentally,
three Keithley employees were actually in Geim and Novoselov's labs
on a routine customer visit when the call came in from the Nobel
Prize Committee, informing Geim and Novoselov of their win."
Award-Winning Research
Geim and Novoselov first isolated graphene, a one-atom-thick
form of carbon with a hexagonal (six-sided), honeycomb-like
structure, in 2004. Potential applications of this material,
sometimes described as "the perfect atomic lattice," include the
development of new super-strong and lightweight materials for
making satellites, aircraft, and automobiles. Electronics
applications may include the development of ultra-fast and
ultra-high-bandwidth transistors, innovative displays, biodevices,
single-molecule gas detectors, and ultracapacitors.
Robert Green, one of the Keithley
employees on hand in the winners' labs when the call came from the
Nobel committee, explains, "They've been using two of our Model
2400 SourceMeter instruments and one of our Model 2182A
Nanovoltmeters to characterize both the resistivity and the very
high carrier mobility of the thinnest crystalline material ever
isolated. Ultra-sensitive, precision sourcing and measurement
equipment such as the Model 2400 SourceMeter instrument, which can
output very low levels of current, and the Model 2182A, which can
measure the smallest voltages, are essential to making repeatable
and reliable measurements."
To learn more about the test products used by Geim and
Novoselov, visit
http://www.keithley.com/products/dcac/voltagesource/broadpurpose/?mn=2400
and
http://www.keithley.com/products/dcac/sensitive/lowvoltage/?mn=2182A.
More Information. For more information about the Model
2400 SourceMeter Instrument or Model 2182A Nanovoltmeter, contact
the company at:
Telephone:
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800-688-9951
440-248-0400
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FAX:
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440-248-6168
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E-mail:
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publisher@keithley.com
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Internet:
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www.keithley.com
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Address:
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Keithley Instruments,
Inc.
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28775 Aurora Road
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Cleveland, OH
44139-1891
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About Keithley Instruments, Inc. With more than 60 years
of measurement expertise, Keithley Instruments has become a world
leader in advanced electrical test instruments and systems. Our
customers are scientists and engineers in the worldwide electronics
industry involved with advanced materials research, semiconductor
device development and fabrication, and the production of end
products such as portable wireless devices. The value we provide
them is a combination of products for their critical measurement
needs and a rich understanding of their applications to improve the
quality of their products and reduce their cost of test.
Products and company names listed are trademarks or trade names
of their respective companies.
For high resolution image of the Model 2400:
http://www.ggcomm.com/KEI/Nobel/2400.jpg
For high resolution image of the Model 2182A:
http://www.ggcomm.com/KEI/Nobel/2182A.jpg
Contact:
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Ellen Modock
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Keithley Instruments,
Inc.
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440-498-2746
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Modock_Ellen@keithley.com
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Twitter: www.twitter.com/keithleyinst
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Reader Inquiries:
1-800-688-9951
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SOURCE Keithley Instruments, Inc.
Copyright t. 8 PR Newswire