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Graphene is considered one of the most futuristic materials with a wide range of applications in the field of new ...
A graphene sensor trained by machine learning can now taste like a human, identifying both basic and complex flavors with ...
A team of researchers report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on a new graphene-based sensor design ...
Graphene's unusual electronic structure enables this extraordinary material to break many records of strength, electricity and heat conduction.
Graphene, one of the world's strongest materials, isn't normally magnetic. But when stacked and twisted, graphene develops a rare form of magnetism, new research finds.
A team of researchers has discovered that a variety of exotic electronic states, including a rare form of magnetism, can arise in a three-layer graphene structure.
Simply put, graphene is a super-thin material that is nonetheless remarkably strong. Here's how it works, and what it could mean for the future of technology.
Graphene is superstrong and superconductive, and it has applications in everything from construction to electronics. But to date there have been almost no commercial uses of the material.
Here we show theoretically the feasibility of graphene/hexagonal BN (h-BN)/graphene structure where top graphene layer acts as one electrical contact while the bottom layer as the other.