Technology 2 min read

Detonation and Angel Food Cake: the Recipe for Graphene Scalability

Chris Sorensen holding Graphene | Kansas State University | K-state.edu

Chris Sorensen holding Graphene | Kansas State University | K-state.edu

In 2004, Andre Geim isolated graphene, a one-atom thick super material with a record-setting strength and conductivity better than that of silicon. This achievement earned him the Nobel Prize in Physics six years later, alongside Konstantin Novoselov.

The electrical and mechanical properties of graphene make it a good candidate for application to many fields, especially those that deal with electronics. The one major drawback is graphene scalability.

#Graphene scalability finally unlocked by #Sorensen's #detonation technique.Click To Tweet

That problem might be solved soon, however, as Kansas physicists developed a new technique that may allow the mass production of graphenes.

You want graphene scalability. The technology could enable an array of practical benefits including rapid smartphone charging and the ability to filter sea water quickly and efficiently.

Simple, Low-Cost Graphene Scalability

A team of physicists at Kansas State University patented an innovative detonation technique to make graphene. The team is led by Cortelyou-Rust University distinguished professor of physics Chris Sorensen. Other researchers include visiting scientist Gajendra Prasad Singh, and Arjun Nepal, a PhD and instructor of physics.

“We have discovered a viable process to make graphene,” said Sorensen, lead inventor of the patent, “our process has many positive properties, from the economic feasibility, the possibility for large-scale production and the lack of nasty chemicals.”

Sorensen boasts the minuscule energy requirements (a single spark is all that is needed) compared to other methods.

A Serendipitous Product

The new process requires three ingredients: a chamber filled with hydrocarbon gas (acetylene or ethylene), oxygen, and a contained detonation using an automobile spark plug. Graphene scalability is enabled by the simplicity of this process.

As is the case with many discoveries, a mistake led to graphene. The team used the detonation technique planning on making an aerosol gel, not graphene. It’s only after further analysis of what they called a “black angel food cake” that they knew it was graphene.

Graphene’s Many Applications

While there are other materials that are strong, or flexible, or super-conductive, graphene boasts all of these qualities. Graphene has a wide range of applications: unbreakable display screens, flexible electronic devices, clearing radioactive waste, and ultra-efficient, ultra-small supercapacitors.

Sorensen’s simple, high-yield process is an important step towards graphene scalability and all of the amazing benefits that would bring.

First AI Web Content Optimization Platform Just for Writers

Found this article interesting?

Let Zayan Guedim know how much you appreciate this article by clicking the heart icon and by sharing this article on social media.


Profile Image

Zayan Guedim

Trilingual poet, investigative journalist, and novelist. Zed loves tackling the big existential questions and all-things quantum.

Comments (0)
Most Recent most recent
You
share Scroll to top

Link Copied Successfully

Sign in

Sign in to access your personalized homepage, follow authors and topics you love, and clap for stories that matter to you.

Sign in with Google Sign in with Facebook

By using our site you agree to our privacy policy.