Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (380) (remove)
Institute
- Wirtschaft (131)
- Forschungszentrum Mikrotechnik (80)
- Forschungszentrum Business Informatics (56)
- Technik | Engineering & Technology (47)
- Department of Computer Science (Ende 2021 aufgelöst; Integration in die übergeordnete OE Technik) (46)
- Soziales & Gesundheit (41)
- Forschungszentrum Energie (37)
- Forschungsgruppe Empirische Sozialwissenschaften (22)
- Didaktik (mit 31.03.2021 aufgelöst; Integration ins TELL Center) (20)
- Josef Ressel Zentrum für Materialbearbeitung (15)
Language
- English (228)
- German (150)
- Multiple languages (2)
Has Fulltext
- no (380) (remove)
Keywords
- Laser ablation (7)
- Entscheidung (6)
- Schreibdidaktik (5)
- Volatile organic compounds (5)
- Ausscheidung (4)
- Evolution strategy (4)
- Organisation (4)
- Soziale Arbeit (4)
- AWG (3)
- Evolution strategies (3)
Strain-tunable GaAs quantum dot: a nearly dephasing-free source of entangled photon pairs on demand
(2018)
This study presents different approaches to increase the sensing area of NiO based semiconducting metal oxide gas sensors. Micro- and nanopatterned laser induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) are generated on silicon and Si/SiO2 substrates. The surface morphologies of the fabricated samples are examined by FE SEM. We select the silicon samples with an intermediate Si3N4 layer due to its superior isolation quality over the thermal oxide for evaluating the hydrogen and acetone sensitivity of a NiO based test sensor.
This paper examines the determinants of subnational location choice of Japanese multinational enterprises (JMNEs) in India to investigate whether or not conventional investment behaviour as ‘foot-loose’ and one-off investments has given way to an agglomeration logic as Japanese foreign direct investment has intensified. Using geographic information system analysis of investment project numbers, we find that Japanese MNE behaviour in India is evolving, with complementing but complex subnational interactions of economic, institutional and infrastructure factors serving as strong determinants of location choice consistently across key phases of India’s liberalization. We argue that Japanese investment decisions in India have followed a self-reinforcing dynamic whereby prior investments indeed attract further investment.