Thursday 27 October 2011

An Introduction to Graphene.


Graphene is a one-atom-thick planar sheet of sp2-bonded carbon atoms that are densely packed in a honeycomb crystal lattice. There are other forms of Carbon that we have been using for years such as the graphite found in the common pencil right the way up to the world’s most expensive form of Carbon, Diamond.

The already existing forms of Carbon consist of sheets of Graphene bonded together to form one solid, however Physicists have known about Graphene for some time now but the problem that they faced was trying to separate the single atom thick sheets without them rolling up into a form of cone and this is where technology has advanced with the use of electron beams and atomic force microscopes.

Graphene has been isolated for a while now and this has been well documented in various papers however the reason that the scientists are so excited right now is that this new 2D design opens up a whole new class of materials with novel electronic, optical and mechanical properties.
2D as we know means that the material extends in only 2 dimensions, Length and Width the other dimension is considered as zero.

Here is how a sheet of Graphene looks.


 I will go into the various aspects of Graphene at a later date, but first I would like to tell you a bit about the people involved in its creation.


Allow Me To Introduce Two Men.

1st

Mr Andre Geim

Born: 1 October 1958, Sochi, Russia

Affiliation at the time of the award: University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.




And 2nd

Mr Konstantin Novoselov

Born: 23 August 1974, Nizhny Tagil, Russia

Affiliation at the time of the award: University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom


In 2010 these two men received The Nobel Prize in Physics for "for groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material Graphene"


There is nothing unusual about the fact that a couple of very clever guys have been rewarded for their efforts until you look a little bit further into what they have done, and when there is a story released from the BBC News in their Science & Environment pages on the 3 October 2011 detailing the UK Governments plans to invest £50m towards developing spin-off technologies from the super strong material ‘Graphene’ you realise that a special thing has happened and is happening.

Over the course of the next few weeks I will be listing entries surrounding the various topics of all things Graphene, including everything from its properties down to its uses in modern technology.

My first listing will be its invention and its inventors.