HomeNewsIndia NewsHere is How Pure Graphene Can Be Now Manufactured Cheaply

    Here is How Pure Graphene Can Be Now Manufactured Cheaply

    Synthesizing Pure Graphene

    Researchers have been singing the praises of graphene ever since it was first isolated from graphite back in 2004. That’s not terribly surprising given the unique properties the two-dimensional material possesses. Graphene has since proven useful for everything from superconductors to microchips to tougher-than-steel rubber bands, but despite the wealth of research, manufacturing graphene for large-scale commercial use has remained problematic — the process is simply too costly and complicated.

    University of Connecticut chemistry professor Doug Adamson might be able to change that. He and his colleagues have figured out a cost-effective way to synthesize this wonder material, and perhaps best of all, Adamson claims his method synthesizes graphene in its pure, unoxidized form. The research has been published in ACS Nano.

    Adamson’s method takes advantage of one of graphene’s typically undesirable characteristics: its insolubility to most solvents. After placing graphite in an interface of water and oil, the material spreads spontaneously to cover the interface. There, it becomes trapped in individual, overlapping graphene sheets that can be locked in place using plastic or other cross-linked polymers.

    “The innovation and technology behind our material is our ability to use a thermodynamically driven approach to un-stack graphite into its constituent graphene sheets, and then arrange those sheets into a continuous, electrically conductive, three-dimensional structure,” Adamson explained in a UConn press release.

     

    It’s Best Behavior

    The “graphene” most researchers use in their studies is an oxidized version of the material. Adding oxygen to graphene makes it easier to work with, but it also increases the cost, requires the use of hazardous materials, and adds time to the manufacturing process. It also reduces graphene’s mechanical, thermal, and electrical properties — essentially what makes graphene great.

    “The simplicity of our approach is in stark contrast to current techniques used to exfoliate graphite that rely on aggressive oxidation or high-energy mixing or sonication — the application of sound energy to separate particles — for extended periods of time,” Adamson said. “As straightforward as our process is, no one else had reported it. We proved it works.”

    Now that Adamson’s team has found a way to produce this pristine graphene, they’re looking forward to potential applications. One of those is desalination. The group created a startup, 2D Material Technologies that is working on a device that uses their pure graphene and a process known as capacitive deionization (CDI) to remove salt from brackish water.

    While much has already been accomplished using graphene, a technique like Adamson’s that can easily be scaled up for the mass production of the material could lead to an explosion of new research and commercial applications. A bit more than a decade after its discovery, all the wonder of graphene could finally be taken advantage of in a meaningful way.

    ELE Times Bureau
    ELE Times Bureauhttps://www.eletimes.ai/
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Related News

    Must Read

    Reinforcement Learning Definition, Types, Examples and Applications

    Reinforcement Learning (RL), unlike other machine learning (ML) paradigms,...

    Infineon drives industry transition to Post-Quantum Cryptography on PSOC Control microcontrollers

    Infineon Technologies AG announced that its microcontrollers (MCUs) in...

    Decision Tree Learning Definition, Types, Examples and Applications

    Decision Tree Learning is a type of supervised machine...

    Renesas Introduces Ultra-Low-Power RL78/L23 MCUs for Next-Generation Smart Home Appliances

    Ultra-low-power RL78/L23 MCUs with segment LCD displays & capacitive...

    STMicroelectronics Appoints MD India

    Anand Kumar is the Managing Director of STMicroelectronics (ST),...

    Top 10 Federated Learning Applications and Use Cases

    Nowadays, individuals own an increasing number of devices—such as...

    Top 10 Federated Learning Companies in India

    Federated learning is transforming AI’s potential in India by...

    Top 10 Federated Learning Algorithms

    Federated Learning (FL) has been termed a revolutionary manner...