Scientists
over the centuries have been looking for discoveries, unveiling the mysteries
of the Nature. The scientific methodology is based on hypotheses, leading to
theories, turning into laws and finally well-defined facts. Graphene, is one
such discovery, thought of by the scientists over the centuries and finally accomplished
in 2003, by Prof. Andre Geim and Prof. Kostya Novoselov, which for no surprise
led to the award of the Physics Nobel prize.
What
is Graphene? The answer is simple. Graphene is a 2-dimensional single sheet of sp2-hybridized
carbons, simply an allotrope of carbon just like diamond or graphite. What
makes it so special, apart from its other interesting properties, is its size.
It has a thickness of the 1 millionth of the human hair, the thinnest material
ever, yet much stronger and harder than diamond and steel, with a tensile strength
of more than 1Tpa. It is optically transparent, highly conductive, and very
elastic. You may probably hang an elephant with a single strand of graphene.
Since
its discovery, graphene has found many applications. Graphene nanoribbons have
been prepared which could revolutionize the field of electronics. Spectroscopy
and biomedical science has already found the use of graphene in production of
ultrafast laser pulses, with duration of just a few wavelengths of the light
used. It has been used a drug carrier, based on its ability to transform into
liquid crystals and change shape under the influence of magnetic field.
Biorobotics, nano-electronics, tissue engineering, fuel cells, sensors, water
filtration, and superconductors are some of the areas where graphene has proved
its worth.
Money
seems to be the major obstacle in the flourish of this super-material. The
production of large scale graphene is quite expensive. Secondly, handling
something this thin on the industrial floor, is another restraint. Preparing
small sheets on the laboratory bench is no doubt a great feat, but the actual
challenge is to bring it out to the market, to be available to the public with
all its whimsical properties and be cheaper. A large funding has been put in a
joint venture, spread over 17 countries, involving hundereds of scientists,
probably the largest number of people working on one single project, “The Graphene Flagship Project”. Still
waiting for the outcome, the world welcomes this super-carbon.
With
the limitations overcome, the steeplechases cleared, the production made
cheaper, and the handling made easier, graphene undoubtedly is the “Chemistry Wonder” and the “Future of Science”.
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