New Wonder-ful Material

http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/20090708/sc_mcclatchy/3268145

WASHINGTON — Imagine a carbon sheet that's only one atom thick but is stronger than diamond and conducts electricity 100 times faster than the silicon in computer chips.
That's graphene, the latest wonder material coming out of science laboratories around the world. It's creating tremendous buzz among physicists, chemists and electronic engineers.
"It is the thinnest known material in the universe, and the strongest ever measured," Andre Geim , a physicist at the University of Manchester, England , wrote in the June 19 issue of the journal Science.
"A few grams could cover a football field," said Rod Ruoff , a graphene researcher at the University of Texas, Austin , in an e-mail. A gram is about 1/30th of an ounce.
Like diamond, graphene is pure carbon. It forms a six-sided mesh of atoms that, through an electron microscope, looks like a honeycomb or piece of chicken wire. Despite its strength, it's as flexible as plastic wrap and can be bent, folded or rolled up like a scroll.
Graphite, the lead in a pencil, is made of stacks of graphene layers. Although each individual layer is tough, the bonds between them are weak, so they slip off easily and leave a dark mark when you write.
Potential graphene applications include touch screens, solar cells, energy storage devices, cell phones and, eventually, high-speed computer chips.
Replacing silicon, the basic electronic material in computer chips, however, "is a long way off . . . far beyond the horizon," said Geim, who first discovered how to produce graphene five years ago.
"In the near and medium term, it's going to be extremely difficult for graphene to displace silicon as the main material in computer electronics," said Tomas Palacios , a graphene researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology . "Silicon is a multi-billion dollar industry that has been perfecting silicon processing for 40 years."
Government and university laboratories, long-established companies such as IBM , and small start-ups are working to solve difficult problems in making graphene and turning it into useful products.
Ruoff founded a company in Austin called Graphene Energy, which is seeking ways to store renewable energy from solar cells or the energy captured from braking in autos.
The Pentagon is also interested in this new high-tech material. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is spending $22 million on research to make computer chips and transistors out of graphene.
Graphene was the leading topic at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society — a leading organization of physicists — in Pittsburgh in April. Researchers packed 23 panel sessions on the topic. About 1,500 scientific papers on graphene were published in 2008 alone.
Until last year, the only way to make graphene was to mount flakes of graphite on sticky tape and separate a single layer by carefully peeling away the tape. They called it the "Scotch Tape technique."
Recently, however, scientists have discovered a more efficient way to produce graphene on an underlying base of copper, nickel or silicon, which subsequently is etched away.
"There has been spectacular progress in the last two or three months," Geim reported in the journal Science. "Challenges that looked so daunting just two years ago have suddenly shrunk, if not evaporated."
"I'm confident there will be many commercial applications," Ruoff said. "We will begin to see hybrid devices — mostly made from silicon, but with a critical part of the device being graphene — in niche applications."

How weird. o.o;

My parents and relatives were talking about it today during our little family/neighborhood gathering. Do you guys think it will be useful in the future!? :P
 
Graphene has been around for ages, at least in basic and theoretical forms; I saw a talk from a guy from the NIST (National Institute of Standards) Ion-trap quantum experimental group give a talk at my uni the other day. He got his PhD at Harvard about a decade or more ago, and that was about fairly complicated graphene-like quantum structures; they're not just flat sheets, but tubes and other such geometries that have far more interesting and valuable effects.

Also, diamond has better 3D strength than graphene, it's just meaningless to consider diamond's single-atom-thick structure because it's lattice is a tetrahedral-type thing, graphene just has a planar bond structure.

EDIT: Also, silicon won't be supplanted as the basic semiconductor in mainstream computing because it is just so cheap; although gallium arsenide heterostructures are seeing a rise in use in certain electronics, such as mobile phones.
 
I'm very interested in its possible application in solar panels, especially considering that the new "blackest black" technology utilizes carbon nanotubes rather like graphene.
 
Interesting. Unfortunately I don't know much about graphene, but I do know a bit about other carbon structures (buckyeballs, nanotubes and the likes), and the number of potential uses for them is staggering.

More than anything, I'd be interested to see if any such carbon nanostructures could see use in superconducting materials. I doubt it, seeing as most current superconducting materials today are made of metal alloys (I remember reading somewhere that one of the highest temperature superconductors was made of Yttrium and a few other metals- Copper, Beryllium and a few others if I remember correctly), but I wouldn't be suprised if they manage to work their way into such materials somehow.

Edit: Apparently Fullerenes have found their way into supercondutors:

http://superconductors.org/atypical.htm

It appears Fullerenes doped with ICl have been shown to be superconducting at temperatures as high as 60K-70K. Interesting.
 
Back
Top