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#1 |
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Graphene
Post graphene-related news and discussions here.
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FutureTimeline.net - a timeline of future history |
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#2 | |
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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#3 |
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aspiring cyborg
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: NYC | KYIV | MINSK
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I haven't been following Graphene developments in the last year. Is it still supposed to allow for the post-silicon continuation of the Moore's Law and are there any practical applications already on the market?
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#4 | ||
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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Several countries have invested into graphene research, the most notable investments being made by governmental agencies in the UK, US, South Korea and Singapore, although more and more countries have a graphene investment programs. One of the EU's FET Flagships Initiatives, is about Graphene R&D. It seems that it is one of the favorites to win and if it does it would be awarded $100 million per year for 10 years. Several companies are already fillings patents for graphene products, even though cheap mass production is still not achieved. Some predicts that graphene based consumer products could be made available with the upcoming 4-5 years. Here is some interesting news that came out today regarding graphene and the university where it was first isolated (U of Manchester) Quote:
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#5 | ||
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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Some more money gets poured into British graphene research
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An interesting find Quote:
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#6 | |
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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#7 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Long Island, NY USA
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I've read the light and strong, conductive material graphene will be an advancement as revolutionary in the 21st century, as the development of polymers (plastics) were to the early 20th. Reading that on SSP, which has had long standing and in depth threads on the look of the future, it's good to see SSC getting on board with a forum that deals with tech advances and space exploration.
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#8 |
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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Today some information leaked about the Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) Flagship competition. The Graphene project was one of the two selected winners. It will receive €1 billion over ten years, half to be provided by the European Commission and half by participants (both private and public).
![]() LEARN MORE HERE: http://www.graphene-flagship.eu |
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#9 | |
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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After the University of Manchester announced its Graphene Institute, we now have Cambridge University interesting in creating an R&D center.
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#10 |
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Marshal of SkyscraperCity
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Nürnberg
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Very interesting idea, I hope it works on a large scale!
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#11 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Nowy Sącz
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FUTURE MARKETS prepared list of 13 most important institutes and companies in the world working with graphene. Among them are IBM, MIT, Samsung, University of Manchaster and ITME (from Warsaw). I don't know whole list, but two of these above are in the European Program, mentioned by Ulpia-Serdica. ITME is responsible for production of the best quality material -> as big as possible and with the minimum number of defects. Method of production developed by ITME use the same devices and technology which are already in use in silicon integrated circuit production. |
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#12 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Ukraine
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#13 | |
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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Graphene Converts Single Photons into Multiple Electrons to Drive Electric Current
Bottles, packaging, furniture, car parts... all made of plastic. Today we find it difficult to imagine our lives without this key material that revolutionized technology over the last century. There is wide-spread optimism in the scientific community that graphene will provide similar paradigm shifting advances in the decades to come. Mobile phones that fold, transparent and flexible solar panels, extra thin computers... the list of potential applications is endless. Scientists, industries and the European Commission are so convinced of the potential of graphene to revolutionize the world economy that they promise an injection of €1.000 million in graphene research. The most recent discovery published in Nature Physics and made by researchers at the Institute of Photonic Science (ICFO), in collaboration with Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany, and Graphenea S.L. Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain, demonstrate that graphene is able to convert a single photon that it absorbs into multiple electrons that could drive electric current (excited electrons) – a very promising discovery that makes graphene an important alternative material for light detection and harvesting technologies, now based on conventional semiconductors like silicon. "In most materials, one absorbed photon generates one electron, but in the case of graphene, we have seen that one absorbed photon is able to produce many excited electrons, and therefore generate larger electrical signals" explains Frank Koppens, group leader at ICFO. This feature makes graphene an ideal building block for any device that relies on converting light into electricity. In particular, it enables efficient light detectors and potentially also solar cells that can harvest light energy from the full solar spectrum with lower loss. The experiment consisted in sending a known number of photons with different energies (different colors) onto a monolayer of graphene. "We have seen that high energy photons (e.g. violet) are converted into a larger number of excited electrons than low energy photons (e.g. infrared). The observed relation between the photon energy and the number of generated excited electrons shows that graphene converts light into electricity with very high efficiency. Even though it was already speculated that graphene holds potential for light-to-electricity conversion, it now turns out that it is even more suitable than expected!" explains Tielrooij, researcher at ICFO. Although there are some issues for direct applications, such as graphene's low absorption, graphene holds the potential to cause radical changes in many technologies that are currently based on conventional semiconductors. "It was known that graphene is able to absorb a very large spectrum of light colors. However now we know that once the material has absorbed light, the energy conversion efficiency is very high. Our next challenge will be to find ways of extracting the electrical current and enhance the absorption of graphene. Then we will be able to design graphene devices that detect light more efficiently and could potentially even lead to more efficient solar cells." concludes Koppens. SOURCE: http://www.azonano.com/news.aspx?newsID=26698
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#14 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2002
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Research Hints at Graphene’s Photovoltaic Potential
March 2, 2013 Researchers have demonstrated that graphene is highly efficient at generating electrons upon absorbing light, which suggests that the material could be used to make light sensors and perhaps even more efficient solar cells. http://www.zeitnews.org/applied-scie...taic-potential
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#15 |
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BANNED
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Baltimore/Washington D.C
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I can make this my self, very useful for my personal applications.
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#16 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2002
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Pentagon weapons-maker finds method for cheap, clean water
A defense contractor better known for building jet fighters and lethal missiles says it has found a way to slash the amount of energy needed to remove salt from seawater, potentially making it vastly cheaper to produce clean water at a time when scarcity has become a global security issue. The process, officials and engineers at Lockheed Martin Corp say, would enable filter manufacturers to produce thin carbon membranes with regular holes about a nanometer in size that are large enough to allow water to pass through but small enough to block the molecules of salt in seawater. A nanometer is a billionth of a meter. Because the sheets of pure carbon known as graphene are so thin - just one atom in thickness - it takes much less energy to push the seawater through the filter with the force required to separate the salt from the water, they said. The development could spare underdeveloped countries from having to build exotic, expensive pumping stations needed in plants that use a desalination process called reverse osmosis. "It's 500 times thinner than the best filter on the market today and a thousand times stronger," said John Stetson, the engineer who has been working on the idea. "The energy that's required and the pressure that's required to filter salt is approximately 100 times less." http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/...92C05720130313
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FutureTimeline.net - a timeline of future history |
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#17 |
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Allegro molto sostenuto
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Gorgoroth
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Very interesting topic, maybe of we put a lot of images of how it works
the graphene it could be better. I will search in my cpu a ppt about it.
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Numenore Last Warriors iψt = −½ψxx + V(x)ψ + κ|ψ|2ψ Cualquier duda , no duden en contactarme , aunque claramente deben dudar en contactarme para que se cumpla el requisito de todo tipo de dudas Battletag: PeregrinTuk#1858
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#18 |
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www.anoldblackmarble.com
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Los Angeles
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Graphene aerogel takes world’s lightest material crown ![]() Not even a year after it claimed the title of the world’s lightest material, aerographite has been knocked off its crown by a new aerogel made from graphene. Created by a research team from China’s Zhejiang University in the Department of Polymer Science and Engineering lab headed by Professor Gao Chao, the ultra-light aerogel has a density lower than that of helium and just twice that of hydrogen. Although first created in 1931 by American scientist and chemical engineer, Samuel Stephens Kistler, aerogels have recently become a hotly contested area of scientific research. A “multiwalled carbon nanotube (MCNT) aerogel” dubbed “frozen smoke” with a density of 4 mg/cm3 lost its world’s lightest material title in 2011 to a micro-lattice material with a density of 0.9 mg/cm3. Less than a year later, aerographite claimed the crown with its density of 0.18 mg/cm3. Full story at Gizmag.
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#19 |
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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Revolutionary new device joins world of smart electronics
Unique properties of graphene and graph Exeter combine to create a new flexible, transparent, photosensitive device Smart electronics are taking the world by storm. From techno-textiles to transparent electronic displays, the world of intelligent technology is growing fast and a revolutionary new device has just been added to its ranks. Researchers at the University of Exeter have developed a new photoelectric device that is both flexible and transparent. The device, described in a paper in the journal ACS Nano, converts light into electrical signals by exploiting the unique properties of the recently discovered materials graphene and graphExeter. GraphExeter is the best known room temperature transparent conductor and graphene is the thinnest conductive material. At just a few atoms thick, the newly developed photoelectric device is ultra-lightweight. This, along with the flexibility of its constituent graphene materials, makes it perfect for incorporating into clothing. Such devices could be used to develop photovoltaic textiles enabling clothes to act as solar panels and charge mobile phones while they are being worn. Photosensitive materials and devices such as the one developed at Exeter can, in the future, also be used for intelligent windows that are able to harvest electricity and display images while remaining transparent. Smart materials have almost unlimited potential applications from integral iPods and keyboards in clothing to electronic displays on glasses and goggles. Saverio Russo, Professor of Physics at the University of Exeter said: "This new flexible and transparent photosensitive device uses graphene and graphExeter to convert light into electrical signals with efficiency comparable to that found in opaque devices based on graphene and metals. "We are only just starting to explore the interfaces between different materials at very small scales and, as this research shows, we are revealing unique properties that we never knew existed. Who knows what surprises are just around the corner." Metallic nanostructures in smart materials typically cause a haze that prevents them from being truly transparent. The photosensitive device developed at Exeter contains no metals and is therefore completely transparent but, as it can detect light from across the whole visible light spectrum, it is as efficient at sensing light as other recently developed opaque photoelectric devices. SOURCE: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releas...-rnd041913.php |
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#20 |
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
Join Date: Oct 2011
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Ultra-fast Switching Graphene Transistor Developed
![]() Graphene researchers announced that they developed a super-fast switching transistor capable of revolutionizing technologies for medical imaging and security screening. Writing in Nature Communications, the researchers from the Universities of Manchester and Nottingham report the first graphene-based transistor with bistable characteristics, which means that the device can spontaneously switch between two electronic states. Such devices are in great demand as emitters of electromagnetic waves in the high-frequency range between radar and infra-red, relevant for applications such as security systems and medical imaging. Bistability is a common phenomenon - a seesaw-like system has two equivalent states and small perturbations can trigger spontaneous switching between them. The way in which charge-carrying electrons in graphene transistors move makes this switching incredibly fast - trillions of switches per second. Wonder material graphene is the world's thinnest, strongest and most conductive material, and has the potential to revolutionize a huge number of diverse applications; from smartphones and ultrafast broadband to drug delivery and computer chips. It was first isolated at The University of Manchester in 2004. "Graphene research is relatively mature but multi-layered devices made of different atomically-thin materials such as graphene were first reported only a year ago. This architecture can bring many more surprises", said Dr Liam Britnell, University of Manchester, the first author of the paper. The device consists of two layers of graphene separated by an insulating layer of boron nitride just a few atomic layers thick. The electron clouds in each graphene layer can be tuned by applying a small voltage. This can induce the electrons into a state where they move spontaneously at high speed between the layers. Because the insulating layer separating the two graphene sheets is ultra-thin, electrons are able to move through this barrier by ‘quantum tunnelling'. This process induces a rapid motion of electrical charge which can lead to the emission of high-frequency electromagnetic waves. One of the researchers, Professor Laurence Eaves, said: "In addition to its potential in medical imaging and security screening, the graphene devices could also be integrated on a chip with conventional, or other graphene-based, electronic components to provide new architectures and functionality. "For more than 40 years, technology has led to ever-smaller transistors; a tour de force of engineering that has provided us with today's state-of-the-art silicon chips which contain billions of transistors. Scientists are searching for an alternative to silicon-based technology, which is likely to hit the buffers in a few years' time, and graphene may be an answer." SOURCE: http://www.scienceworldreport.com/ar...-developed.htm |
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