In the News (prior to 2000)
June 10, 1999
GMR
Isolator for Digital Lines Keeps Nasties Away
EDN
Galvanic isolation is your defense, and you can now add another tool to
your isolation kit...
June 1999
Giant Magnetoresistance
Devices Move In (.pdf)
The Industrial Physicist
The discovery of GMR and advances in GMR materials have led to its current
and potential commercial applications for sensors, read heads, nonvolatile memory,
and galvanic isolators.
March 1999
Computer
RAM Chips That Hold Memory When Power Is Off
NIST Special Publication 950-1
Researchers at NVE saw the use of GMR materials as a way to achieve advances
in signal strength, and they made important advances in the producibility of GMR
materials.
December 1, 1998
NVE
Receives NIST Award
Electronic Design
The project is expected to lead to the miniaturization of one of the few
remaining components that has not kept pace with this trend in the electronics
industry.
June 4, 1998
Fight
Corruption, Preserve Purity With Analog-Signal Isolation (.pdf)
EDN
For years, analog designers have dreamed of ways to transmit signals across
an isolation barrier without modulation. Now, sensors that use the giant magnetoresistive
(GMR) effect offer that promise... Because the technology for depositing coils
atop silicon chips now also exists, another dream of analog designersmonolithic
isolation amplifiersis finally also within reach.
Spring 1998
GMR Sensors
Hit the Highway
TechUpdate
Nonvolatile Electronics, Inc. is marketing a low-cost line of tiny, power-efficient
magnetic sensors that offer greater sensitivity and temperature stability...
August 15, 1996
Sensors
and Coded Particles Foil Counterfeiters
EDN
Two companies have devised ways to foil counterfeiters who forge money and
high-value items...
Summer 1995
Deal
Advances New Computer Memory
TechUpdate
A new class of computer memory devices that combine the durability of magnetic
storage with the small packaging and fast access times of silicon memory chip
technology has come one step closer to the marketplace, thanks to a teaming agreement
between the electronics giant Motorola and Nonvolatile Electronics, Inc.
Summer 1994
Sensitive
Sensors
TechUpdate
Nonvolatile Electronics, Inc., or NVE (Plymouth, MN), plans this summer
to produce magnetic field sensors from a new material that makes them more sensitive
than current sensors.
April 17, 1994
Magnetic
Field of Dreams
Businessweek
Daughton, formerly a scientist at both IBM and Honeywell Inc., founded NVE
in 1989 with the dream of using magnetoresistance to store information as tiny
bits of magnetism. Thats radically different from dynamic random-access
memory chips, which use a capacitor to hold information as electrical energy.
January 5, 1990
Highly
Magnetoresistive Thin Film Multilayers [NVEs first Government contract]
National Science Foundation
The objective of this program is to synthesize a thin film multilayer composite
material with a magnetoresistive effect up to ten times the magneto-resistance
ratio of permalloy material.
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