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Search: WFRF:(Olsson Gustaf)

  • Result 1-25 of 358
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  • Kehoe, Laura, et al. (author)
  • Make EU trade with Brazil sustainable
  • 2019
  • In: Science. - : American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). - 0036-8075 .- 1095-9203. ; 364:6438, s. 341-
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)
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  • Abermann, S., et al. (author)
  • Impact of Al-, Ni-, TiN-, and Mo-metal gates on MOCVD-grown HfO2 and ZrO2 high-k dielectrics
  • 2007
  • In: Microelectronics and reliability. - : Elsevier BV. - 0026-2714 .- 1872-941X. ; 47:4-5, s. 536-539
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In this work we compare the impacts of nickel (Ni), titanium-nitride (TiN), molybdenum (Mo), and aluminium (Al), gates on MOS capacitors incorporating HfO2- or ZrO2-dielectrics. The primary focus lies on interface trapping, oxide charging, and thermodynamical stability during different annealing steps of these gate stacks. Whereas Ni, Mo, and especially TIN are investigated as most promising candidates for future CMOS devices, Al acted as reference gate material to benchmark the parameters. Post-metallization annealing of both, TiN- and Mo-stacks, resulted in very promising electrical characteristics. However, gate stacks annealed at temperatures of 800 degrees C or 950 degrees C show thermodynamic instability and related undesirable high leakage currents.
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  • Abermann, S., et al. (author)
  • Processing and evaluation of metal gate/high-k/Si capacitors incorporating Al, Ni, TiN, and Mo as metal gate, and ZrO2 and HfO2 as high-k dielectric
  • 2007
  • In: Microelectronic Engineering. - : Elsevier BV. - 0167-9317 .- 1873-5568. ; 84:5-8, s. 1635-1638
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We evaluate various metal gate/high-k/Si capacitors by their resulting electrical characteristics. Therefore, we process MOS gate stacks incorporating aluminium (Al), nickel (Ni), titanium-nitride (TiN), and molybdenum (Mo) as the gate material, and metal organic chemical vapour deposited (MOCVD) ZrO2 and HfO2 as the gate dielectric, respectively. The influence of the processing sequence - especially of the thermal annealing treatment - on the electrical characteristics of the various gate stacks is being investigated. Whereas post metallization annealing in forming gas atmosphere improves capacitance-voltage behaviour (due to reduced interface-, and oxide charge density), current-voltage characteristics degrade due to a higher leakage current after thermal treatment at higher temperatures. The Flatband-voltage values for the TiN-, Mo-, and Ni-capacitors indicate mid-gap pinning of the metal gates, however, Ni seems to be thermally unstable on ZrO2, at least within the process scheme we applied.
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  • Arnell, Magnus, et al. (author)
  • Making waves : A vision for digital water utilities
  • 2023
  • In: Water Research X. - : Elsevier BV. - 2589-9147. ; 19
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Digitalisation has developed over half a century and is one of the global trends defining society of today and future. Digitalisation is envisioned to help water utilities to become: i) community orientated and digitally integrated with customers and society; ii) digitally transformed end-to-end throughout the value-chain and interconnected between business units; iii) predictive & proactive, utilizing models and applications for control and decision support; iv) visually communicative with customers and society, creating customers aware of the value of water; and financially sustainable by optimal operation (OPEX), and sustainable investments (CAPEX). Digitalisation is a process for business development, where digital solutions are used for automation and innovation. Utilizing the potential of the technological innovation requires a parallel organisational transformation. Any implementation of systems or applications must be motivated in actual needs for the organisation and service delivery. Prior to any digitalisation, identifying issues and areas of improvement is essential. Starting the digital journey, motivating employees, improving the digital culture and creating acceptance of new processes are needed on all levels. Most digital applications require collection, storage, sharing and integrated analysis of large amounts of data. This includes both soft and hard digital infrastructure.
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  • Aspegren, H., et al. (author)
  • The Urban Water System - a Future Swedish Perspective
  • 1997
  • In: Water Science and Technology. - 0273-1223. ; 35:9, s. 33-44
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • It is argued, that the use of water can no longer be regarded as an almost free commodity. The idea to assess and value the environmental impact of the water use represents a true change of paradigm. The key issue is that any future wastewater treatment system has to be evaluated according to a quantitative criterion. This has to consider: •hygienic aspects: we believe that nobody will accept a lower hygienic standard than today. •environmental impact: the wastewater impact on the environment has steadily increased the need for better treatment. We need to be prepared for changes in the society by having a readiness manifested as continuing dynamic research environment in this area. Too often the knowledge build-up has been re-active instead of pro-active. •economising resources: wastewater treatment looks and probably should look quite different in densely populated urban areas and in rural areas. Considering resource handling one has to consider already invested capital costs, land use, water re-use, organic and nutrient use and re-use, as well as overall use of energy. •user aspects: technical functionality, economy and liability in different aspects require profound consideration. A sustainable wastewater treatment has to adapt to a local environment and the total resource demand has to be calculated, including a direct environmental impact on receiving waters, air and soil as well as energy consumption and nutrient recycling. Thus, there is an apparent need for. •quantitative performance index: the quest for sustainable development has to be based on objective reasons as well as subjective ones. An integrated performance index is part of a necessary decision making model for the design and operation of wastewater treatment systems. In this index, it is evident that a trade-off should be made between the pursued quality of the process outputs (liquid, solids, gas) and the associated efforts (investments, operation) required to achieve this considering the inputs (wastewater). In order to make this trade-off, however, a common framework is needed to quantitatively compare the different objectives. A metric to judge the sustainability of different options will facilitate a fruitful dialogue between e.g. politicians, ecologists, engineers and economists. Only a truly interdisciplinary approach can help to solve the challenges ahead.
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  • Result 1-25 of 358
Type of publication
journal article (133)
conference paper (91)
reports (75)
book chapter (26)
book (15)
research review (7)
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doctoral thesis (6)
other publication (3)
licentiate thesis (2)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (241)
other academic/artistic (109)
pop. science, debate, etc. (8)
Author/Editor
Olsson, Gustaf (255)
Nicholls, Ian A. (32)
Sjöblom, Gustaf (19)
Olsson, Jörgen (17)
Olsson, Bengt (13)
Jeppsson, Ulf (13)
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Egnell, Gustaf (13)
Mattiasson, Bo (12)
Rosén, Christian (11)
Simpson, A (10)
Liu, Jing (10)
Åström, Karl Johan (8)
Wiklander, Jesper G. ... (7)
Suriyanarayanan, Sub ... (7)
Liu, Yi (7)
Ujang, Z. (6)
de Jong, Johnny (6)
Carlsson, Bengt (5)
Edgren, Gustaf (5)
Abermann, S. (4)
Bertagnolli, E. (4)
Damayanti, A. (4)
Ericson, Lars (4)
Henschel, Henning (4)
Sellergren, Börje (4)
Andrews, John F. (4)
Gerhardt, Karin (4)
Vanrolleghem, P. (4)
Boström, Gustaf (4)
Olsson, Jörgen, 1966 ... (3)
Efavi, J. (3)
Lövheim, Hugo, 1981- (3)
Andersson, Håkan S. (3)
Wikman, Susanne (3)
Rieger, L. (3)
Akselsson, Cecilia (3)
Olsson, Martin L (3)
Löfgren, Stefan (3)
Berglund, Håkan (3)
Eriksson, Leif, 1970 (3)
Spanjers, H. (3)
Steyer, J.-P. (3)
Rosendahl, Erik (3)
Nielsen, M. (3)
Ulander, Lars, 1962 (3)
Aspegren, H (3)
Lundin-Olsson, Lille ... (3)
Fransson, J E S (3)
Blom, Hans-Olof (3)
Von Stedingk, Henrik (3)
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University
Lund University (262)
Uppsala University (49)
Linnaeus University (34)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (13)
Chalmers University of Technology (9)
Umeå University (8)
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Karolinska Institutet (6)
Malmö University (5)
University of Gothenburg (3)
Royal Institute of Technology (3)
Linköping University (3)
Luleå University of Technology (2)
Stockholm University (2)
University West (2)
RISE (2)
Mid Sweden University (1)
University of Skövde (1)
Karlstad University (1)
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute (1)
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Language
English (315)
Swedish (34)
Undefined language (3)
Chinese (2)
German (1)
French (1)
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Russian (1)
Korean (1)
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Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Engineering and Technology (269)
Natural sciences (49)
Medical and Health Sciences (18)
Agricultural Sciences (13)
Social Sciences (8)
Humanities (3)

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