Medicine & TechnologyTechnological advances, like bronze, iron, steel, and silicon shaped history, while graphene, a supermaterial, may revolutionize physics and engineering's future. Read the article to learn more.
While carbon nanotube fibers are known to be less durable than the nanotubes within them, a new study could help close the gap between these materials.
With the standard household microwave oven, copper foil, and glass containers, researchers from the University of Wyoming have turned coal powder into graphite.
The melting temperature of graphite and graphene are high and unfamiliar. Recent experiments show a solid to gas phase transformation that skips the liquid part. Could learning more about this prove useful?