Chinaunix首页 | 论坛 | 博客
  • 博客访问: 855569
  • 博文数量: 1352
  • 博客积分: 61620
  • 博客等级: 大将
  • 技术积分: 14390
  • 用 户 组: 普通用户
  • 注册时间: 2008-09-12 10:03
文章分类

全部博文(1352)

文章存档

2011年(114)

2010年(979)

2009年(231)

2008年(28)

我的朋友

分类:

2010-08-25 10:58:06

researchers are only beginning to unlock Like it or not, the global tide of electronic gear appears to be Expanded Metal only at the beginning of a long and unstoppable rise, creating an enormous obstacle to the delivery of enough sustainable energy to meet the growing demand. One solution is to create a new electronics platform that is far more efficient than anything currently in production, and that’s where graphene comes in.

Graphene and Energy Efficiency

Graphene was discovered just a few years ago, and researchers are only beginning to unlock its potential for improving energy efficiency in electronics. Graphene is a form of carbon that occurs in sheets just one atom thick. The atoms form a hexagonal pattern similar to chicken wire. Graphene is superstrong and could function as an extraordinarily efficient conductor – if only it can be manipulated into a useful form. One solution Expanded Metal is being developed at the University of South Florida, where researchers supported by the National Science Foundation have developed a method for making graphene “nanowires.” At Rice University, researchers are looking into the use of graphene’s sister material, graphane, as an insulator, and chemists at the University of Chicago are developing ways to coax graphene into shapes by applying drops of water.

Strain and Energy Efficiency

The “bubble” discovery was one of those happy accidents. It occurred when researchers grew graphene on a platinum crystal, which threw the hexagonal pattern out of whack. That resulted in triangular “bubbles” that have their own individual energy levels, in contrast to a continuous range of energy across an unstrained sheet of graphene. The application of atomic-level strain to achieve new physical properties in a material is not limited to graphene. At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers applied a phenomenon called think lattice Expanded Metal strain to yttria-stabilized zirconia (yttrium is a silvery metal) and discovered that the new configuration increased the material’s conductivity by four orders of magnitude.
阅读(305) | 评论(0) | 转发(0) |
给主人留下些什么吧!~~