substrate - meaning and definition. What is substrate
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What (who) is substrate - definition

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Substrates; Substrate (disambiguation)

substrate         
<hardware> The body or base layer of an integrated circuit, onto which other layers are deposited to form the circuit. The substrate is usually Silicon, though Sapphire is used for certain applications, particularly military, where radiation resistance is important. The substrate is originally part of the wafer from which the die is cut. It is used as the electrical ground for the circuit. (1996-04-07)
substrate         
['s?bstre?t]
¦ noun
1. the surface or material on which an organism lives, grows, or feeds.
2. the substance on which an enzyme acts.
3. a surface on which something is deposited or inscribed, e.g. the silicon wafer used to manufacture integrated circuits.
Origin
C19: anglicized form of substratum.
Substrate         
·adj Having very slight furrows.
II. Substrate ·vt To strew or lay under anything.
III. Substrate ·noun A Substratum.

Wikipedia

Substrate

Substrate may refer to:

Pronunciation examples for substrate
1. and replacing the substrate with natural substrate.
Biohm - Food Waste to Future Builds _ Ehab Sayed _ Talks at Google
2. over to another substrate.
Artificial You - AI and The Future Of Your Mind _ Susan Schneider _ Talks at Google
3. terrific substrate for learning.
Goal Play _ Paul Levy _ Talks at Google
4. onto a polymer substrate.
Big Data of the Nervous System _ Walter Voit _ Talks at Google
5. is substrate-independent.
The Meta-Problem of Consciousness _ Professor David Chalmers _ Talks at Google
Examples of use of substrate
1. But enzymes are small, and move their substrate particles over short distances.
2. The most complex stage involved placing the protein molecules on the substrate, all facing the same direction.
3. They include the substrate production method for the cultivation of mushroom, seed–spawn cultivation technology and phased cultivation method.
4. "We introduced genetic changes into bacteria so that the proteins they create can bond to a substrate bottom metal and be suited for use," Carmeli explained.
5. "This is the biological substrate for winning and losing streaks," said Coates, noting that testosterone–induced bravado inevitably peaks, causing winners to reach too far.