Showing posts with label Graphene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graphene. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 2

Graphene’s Superconductivity


Scientists studying ‘magic-angle’ graphene have captured the clearest evidence yet of the electronic signature behind its superconductivity, cutting through years of speculation over what actually drives its exotic behaviour.

‘When superconductivity was first discovered in magic-angle graphene, it was surprising,’ says Jeong Min Park at Princeton University. ‘Graphene by itself was not a superconductor, yet simply twisting layers turned it into one.’

This is because when two or more graphene layers are twisted at a very specific angle – the magic angle – electrons in the system slow down dramatically. ‘When [this happens], they interact with each other much more strongly, and this gi
ves rise to … new behaviours that don’t exist in the individual layers,’ says Park.


Monday, April 22

New Material Goldene


Researchers have managed to create “goldene”, an incredibly thin version of gold.

The work follows the successful production of graphene, which is made out of a single layer graphite atoms. That has been hailed as a miracle material: it is astonishingly strong, and much better at conducting heat and electricity than copper.

Goldene is built on the same principle, with researchers spreading out gold so it is just one atom layer thick. And, similar to graphene, scientists say that the process gives it a variety of new properties that could lead to major breakthroughs.    READ MORE...