Short film produced by the European Graphene-Flagship initiative, introducing graphene, the 'wonder substance' set to revolutionise the electronics industry.
Graphene can be used as flexible and stretchable transparent electrodes in the future. Credit: Vryus(c) vryus.net SKKU graphene research laboratory http
Flexible, transparent electronics are closer to reality with the creation of graphene-based electrodes at Rice University. The lab of Rice chemist James Tour has created...
My entry to the techNyou Science Ambassadors competition, visit www.facebook.com/talkingtechnology and www.youtube.com/technyouvids to find out more about these guys.
Read the Transcript: to.pbs.org Russian scientists Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov have been awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics for their work on graphene, a...
Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science at Yale, Dr. Ainissa Ramirez, discusses how a layer of carbon that is one atom thick, called...
Scientists working in the field of nanoscience and nanotechnology discuss the future for the new monolayer material, graphene, at the COST NanoTP meeting in Trieste...
Imagine having an energy storage device that stores as much energy as a conventional battery, yet, can be charged 100 to 1000 times faster. Supercapacitors...