Graphene has drawn attention as a scientific curiosity owing to its record conductivities, strength and thermal properties.
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Graphene material that folds, moves, and senses could power next-gen soft robots
McGill University engineers have developed ultra-thin materials that can move, fold, and reshape themselves, ...
Movable structures can be manufactured from flexible, tear-resistant graphene oxide films, which simultaneously provide ...
Scientists have created new way to characterise graphene oxide (GO) cheaper and quicker than ever before, helping get the emerging technology out of the lab and into the market. Researchers at King’s ...
New findings reveal that organosulfate groups, not carboxyls, control graphene oxide's surface charge in water, challenging long-standing models and reshaping its chemical profile. (Nanowerk Spotlight ...
Researchers at KTH Royal Institute of Technology claim to have significantly advanced sustainable nanomaterial synthesis by creating a scalable and repeatable process for creating graphene oxide (GO) ...
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Biomedical Applications of Graphene
Graphene, a two-dimensional (2D) material consisting of a single layer of carbon atoms, has attracted growing interest due to its unique physicochemical properties, which support a wide range of ...
Vertical graphene microstructures break the thickness-performance tradeoff in thermoacoustic speakers, enabling flexible ...
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