Thread: Flash Graphene
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01-30-2020, 06:38 PM #1
Flash Graphene
That banana peel, turned into graphene, can help facilitate a massive reduction of the environmental impact of concrete and other building materials. While you're at it, toss in those plastic empties.
A new process introduced by the Rice University lab of chemist James Tour can turn bulk quantities of just about any carbon source into valuable graphene flakes. The process is quick and cheap; Tour said the "flash graphene" technique can convert a ton of coal, food waste or plastic into graphene for a fraction of the cost used by other bulk graphene-producing methods.
This appears to have a lot of potentialseeya
dan
I'm just one stomach flu away from my goal weight.
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01-30-2020, 07:04 PM #2
Re: Flash Graphene
New advancement in touchscreen properties
Researchers have developed an ultra-thin and ultra-flexible electronic material that could be printed and rolled out like newspaper, for the touchscreens of the future.
The touch-responsive technology is 100 times thinner than existing touchscreen materials and so pliable it can be rolled up like a tube.
To create the new conductive sheet, an RMIT University-led team used a thin film common in cell phone touchscreens and shrunk it from 3D to 2D, using liquid metal chemistry.
The nano-thin sheets are readily compatible with existing electronic technologies and because of their incredible flexibility, could potentially be manufactured through roll-to-roll (R2R) processing just like a newspaper.seeya
dan
I'm just one stomach flu away from my goal weight.
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01-31-2020, 01:31 AM #3
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Re: Flash Graphene
Okay, so, not being all techno savvy and all, could this also be used for TV picture screens too? 😎
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