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Physicists show unlimited heat conduction in graphene

CCADC

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https://phys.org/news/2014-05-physicists-unlimited-graphene.html


The researchers who are working with graphene must feel the same way as the people who first worked with electricity. It seems like every day there's a new unexpected use for this stuff, and the most incredible thing about it, to me at least, is that this is just one material in a whole array of possible materials.

Imagine not needing water based cooling systems in cars and such?

So question is, when are we actually going to see a product in the wild using this stuff? There's so many 'discoveries' of all the 'amazing' and 'wonderful' things this shit can apparently do yet NOTHING on the market that actually applies a single thing they've said.
 
Had to educate myself.

Graphene is pure carbon in the form of a very thin, nearly transparent sheet, one atom thick. It is remarkably strong for its very low weight (100 times stronger than steel[SUP][1][/SUP]) and it conducts heat and electricity with great efficiency.

While scientists had theorized about graphene for decades, it was first produced in the lab in 2004.[SUP][2][/SUP] Because it is virtually two-dimensional, it interacts oddly with light and with other materials.

Researchers have identified the bipolar transistor effect, ballistic transport of charges and large quantum oscillations.

Technically, graphene is a crystalline allotrope of carbon with 2-dimensional properties.

In graphene, carbon atoms are densely packed in a regular sp[SUP]2[/SUP]-bondedatomic-scale chicken wire (hexagonal) pattern.

Graphene can be described as a one-atom thick layer of graphite. It is the basic structural element of other allotropes, including graphite, charcoal, carbon nanotubes and fullerenes. It can also be considered as an indefinitely large aromatic molecule, the limiting case of the family of flat polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.

Graphene research has expanded quickly since the substance was first isolated in 2004. Research was informed by theoretical descriptions of graphene's composition, structure and properties, which had all been calculated decades earlier.

High-quality graphene also proved to be surprisingly easy to isolate, making more research possible. Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov at the University of Manchester won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010 "for groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material graphene".[SUP][3][/SUP]
 
I've followed graphene and similar elemental sheets for a few years, and it's a fascinating field. The opportunities for graphene are enormous, and it has several applications that will impact us all, from medical devices to batteries.
 
I plan to create my own line of Graphene Condoms so men all around the world can become electrifying lovers, each and every time, with minimal energy consumption required.
 
Louis XIV said:
I plan to create my own line of Graphene Condoms so men all around the world can become electrifying lovers, each and every time, with minimal energy consumption required.

I tried creating a graphene woman. She had no personality, lay there and didn't move at all during sex, and cost a frikin' fortune. Just like my first wife.
 
Louis XIV said:
I plan to create my own line of Graphene Condoms so men all around the world can become electrifying lovers, each and every time, with minimal energy consumption required.

Would it come in different colors?.

Make mine extra large.
 
Great post, I've been following this for a while too. :biggrin2:
 
Bubba said:
Where can I buy stocks on it?.

My condom company will be privately owned at first, but I'll call you before I make my first IPO offering so you can jump in with both feet.
 
Louis XIV said:
My condom company will be privately owned at first, but I'll call you before I make my first IPO offering so you can jump in with both feet.

Penny stocks, eh :biggrin2:
 
Hemp fibres 'better than graphene'

The waste fibres from hemp crops can be transformed into high-performance energy storage devices, scientists say. They "cooked" cannabis bark into carbon nanosheets and built supercapacitors "on a par with or better than graphene" - the industry gold standard.

Electric cars and power tools could harness this hemp technology, the US researchers say. They presented their work at the American Chemical Society meeting in San Francisco. "People ask me: why hemp? I say, why not?" said Dr David Mitlin of Clarkson University, New York, who describes his device in the journal ACS Nano. "We're making graphene-like materials for a thousandth of the price - and we're doing it with waste. "The hemp we use is perfectly legal to grow. It has no THC in it at all - so there's no overlap with any recreational activities."

In countries including China, Canada and the UK, hemp can be grown industrially for clothing and building materials. But the leftover bast fibre - the inner bark - typically ends up as landfill.

Dr Mitlin's team took these fibres and recycled them into supercapacitors - energy storage devices which are transforming the way electronics are powered.

Conventional batteries store large reservoirs of energy and drip-feed it slowly, whereas supercapacitors can rapidly discharge their entire load. They are ideal in machines that rely on sharp bursts of power. In electric cars, for example, supercapacitors are used for regenerative braking.

Releasing this torrent requires electrodes with high surface area - one of graphene's many phenomenal properties. Stronger than diamond, more conductive than copper and more flexible than rubber, the "miracle material" was the target of a £50m investment by UK Chancellor George Osborne.

But while this carbon monolayer is the state-of-the-art material for commercial supercapacitors, it is prohibitively expensive to produce. Finding cheap, sustainable alternatives is the speciality of Dr Mitlin's former research group at the University of Alberta.

They have experimented with all flavours of biowaste - from peat moss to eggs. Most recently, they turned banana peel into batteries. "You can do really interesting things with bio-waste. We've pretty much figured out the secret sauce of it," said Dr Mitlin. The trick is to tailor the right plant fibre to the right electrical device - according to their organic structure.

"With banana peels, you can turn them into a dense block of carbon - we call it pseudo-graphite - and that's great for sodium ion batteries," he explained. "But if you look at hemp fibre its structure is the opposite - it makes sheets with high surface area - and that's very conducive to supercapacitors."

The first step, he explained, "is to cook it - almost like a pressure cooker. It's called hydrothermal synthesis. "Once you dissolve the lignin and the semicellulose, it leaves these carbon nanosheets - a pseudo-graphene structure."

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-28770876
 
Graphene shows promise for bulletproof armour

The "wonder material" graphene could be used to make bulletproof armour.

US researchers carried out miniature ballistic tests by firing tiny silica spheres at sheets of graphene.

In Science magazine, they report that atom-thick layers of this material can be stronger than steel when it comes to absorbing impacts.

Graphene consists of a sheet of single atoms arranged in a honeycomb structure. It is thin, strong, flexible and electrically conductive, and has the potential to transform electronics as well as other technologies.

Jae-Hwang Lee from the University of Massachusetts in Amherst and colleagues used lasers to observe the silica "microbullets" as they penetrated sheets of graphene between 10 and 100 layers thick. They compared the kinetic energy of the spheres before and after they pierced the graphene sheets.

Observations using an electron microscope revealed that graphene dissipates energy by stretching into a cone shape and then cracking in various directions. The mini-ballistic tests showed that grapheme's extraordinary strength, elasticity and stiffness allowed it to absorb between eight and 10 times the impacts that steel can withstand.

However, the way in which graphene sheets responded to the microbullet also resulted in a wider impact hole - which could be a potential disadvantage. Jae-Hwang Lee's team proposes that combining graphene with one or more additional materials to form a composite could prevent the cracking and solve this problem.

In 2010, Manchester University, UK, researchers Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov shared the Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery of graphene. They published details of their advance in the academic journal Science in 2004.

Another study published in Nature this week revealed that graphene sheets allow proton particles to pass through them, a property that could improve the efficiency of hydrogen fuel cells.

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-30246089
 
Scientists use Graphene for the next-generation of fuel-efficient cars

Graphene seems to be the right answer to the automotive industry to build a much greener and fuel efficient vehicle in future which would convert heat into electricity.

A lot of heat is generated by the engine of a running vehicle such as car, a bike, and even a computer. Under normal condition this heat gets wasted; however just wonder if this heat is harvested and used to recharge the batteries of car or power the car’s air-conditioning, would it make some difference? Yes, of course this would bring a significant change in the next generation of automotive industry as this technology of converting heat into electricity would lead to lesser consumption of the fuel.

It has been observed that in case of an average car around 70% of the energy that has been generated by fuel consumption is lost to heat. By using a ‘thermoelectric material’, one can harvest this heat.

Thermoelectric materials can generate electrical current when there is a difference in the temperature between one side of the material and the other. Thus Thermoelectric materials are able to convert heat to electricity and vice versa which can be seen in refrigerators.

The limitation here is that the material should not only be a good conductor of electricity but it should also be able to dissipate heat properly.

In the present scenario, the materials which can exhibit the Thermoelectric property are the ones which are usually toxic or they can work only under very high temperatures; on the contrary the heat generated by a car’s engine is not sufficient enough to convert it into electricity by the thermoelectric materials. Also these materials are too costly to be used commercially.

Traditional materials thus cannot serve the purpose and hence scientists had to move towards nanomaterials.

Scientists at the University of Manchester, U.K. in collaboration with the company European Thermodynamics Ltd. are now making use of graphene to generate low cost thermoelectric materials which finds a wide application in the automotive industry.

The research team, led by Prof Ian Kinloch, Prof Robert Freer and Yue Lin added a small amount of graphene to strontium titanium dioxide (STO). Originally STO is a thermoelectric material which is able to generate current from heat only at very high temperature; however it was seen that with addition of graphene, STO started showing its thermoelectric property at the room temperature.

Prof Freer said: “Current oxide thermoelectric materials are limited by their operating temperatures which can be around 700 degrees Celsius. This has been a problem which has hampered efforts to improve efficiency by utilizing heat energy waste for some time.”

He added: “Our findings show that by introducing a small amount of graphene to the base material can reduce the thermal operating window to room temperature which offers a huge range of potential for applications.”

Prof Freer further also added: “The new material will convert 3-5% of the heat into electricity. That is not much but, given that the average vehicle loses roughly 70% of the energy supplied to it by its fuel to waste heat and friction, recovering even a small percentage of this with thermoelectric technology would be worth while.”

The details of the research and its findings have been published in the journal ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces.

The study showed that the superlative property exhibited by Graphene along with its small size actually helps to slow down the transfer of the heat through the material which also leads to lowering the operating temperature to the desired levels.

The study would also help the car manufacturers who have been looking out for methods to improve the fuel efficiency along with performance retaining capacity of their cars. Addition of Graphene would also help in reducing the cost of fuel and further when it is used as a composite material in chassis or bodywork it will also considerably help to reduce the overall weight of the automobile.

https://www.techworm.net/2015/08/gr...-next-generation-fuel-efficient-vehicles.html
 
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