07 October 2010

Graphene explained

This week the Nobel Prize in physics was awarded to two scientists for their work with graphene (a one-atom-thick monolayer of carbon atoms).  Big Think offers a brief summary of its properties and potential uses:
Some say that it will be heralded as one of the materials that will literally change our lives in the 21st century. Not only is graphene the thinnest possible material that is feasible, but it's also about 200 times stronger than steel and conducts electricity better than any material known to man—at room temperature. Researchers at Columbia University's Fu Foundation School of Engineering; who proved that graphene is the strongest material ever measured stated that "It would take an elephant, balanced on a pencil, to break through a sheet of graphene the thickness of Saran Wrap."

Potential applications for the material include the replacing of carbon fibers in composite materials to eventually aid in the production of lighter aircraft and satellites; replacing silicon in transistors; embedding the material in plastics to enable them to conduct electricity; graphene-based sensors could sniff out dangerous molecules; increasing the efficiency of electric batteries by use of graphene powder; optoelectronics; stiffer-stronger-lighter plastics; leak-tight, plastic containers that keep food fresh for weeks; transparent conductive coatings for solar cells and displays; stronger wind turbines; stronger medical implants; better sports equipment; supercapacitors; improved conductivity of materials; high-power high frequency electronic devices; artificial membranes for separating two liquid reservoirs; advancements in touchscreens; LCD's; OLED's; graphene nanoribbons could be a way to construct ballistic transistors; and nanogaps in graphene sheets may potentially provide a new technique for rapid DNA sequencing.

5 comments:

  1. Wow, what must it feel like to "hold" a sheet of it? Everything I'm trying to imagine is far too thick.. spiderwebs... peeled skin... it must be almost non perceivable at all.

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  2. Graphene pollution is going to be pretty awesome someday. Imagine nets of it discarded in the ocean, or a grocery bag of the stuff floating around on the wind.

    On the other hand, maybe the substance will stay valuable enough that that will never happen. One can hope.

    In that scenario, the salvage operations get interesting... Take apart (or burn away?) the non-graphene bits, and then sell graphene by the ounce. I guess the existing shape is actually of critical importance - you might sell a graphene bag a lot more easily than an oddly-shaped sheet that can't act as a container...

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  3. Boy that stuff's going to make my carbon fiber bike seem pretty heavy one day.

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  4. i like how Scotch tape was key to their success. just an everyday household item.

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  5. Most important discoveries never end up getting used like they thought they could at first. Take for instance the laser...to Blue-ray players? You can't just think stuff like that up.

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