PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Graphene gets a Teflon makeover

2010-11-09
(Press-News.org) Professor Andre Geim, who along with his colleague Professor Kostya Novoselov won the 2010 Nobel Prize for graphene – the world's thinnest material, has now modified it to make fluorographene – a one-molecule-thick material chemically similar to Teflon.

Fluorographene is fully-fluorinated graphene and is basically a two-dimensional version of Teflon, showing similar properties including chemical inertness and thermal stability.

The results are this week reported in the advanced online issue of the journal Small. The work is a large international effort and involved research groups from China, the Netherlands, Poland and Russia.

The team hope that fluorographene, which is a flat, crystal version of Teflon and is mechanically as strong as graphene, could be used as a thinner, lighter version of Teflon, but could also be in electronics, such as for new types of LED devices.

Graphene, a one-atom-thick material that demonstrates a huge range of unusual and unique properties, has been at the centre of attention since groundbreaking research carried out at The University of Manchester six years ago.

Its potential is almost endless – from ultrafast transistors just one atom thick to sensors that can detect just a single molecule of a toxic gas and even to replace carbon fibres in high performance materials that are used to build aircraft.

Professor Geim and his team have exploited a new perspective on graphene by considering it as a gigantic molecule that, like any other molecule, can be modified in chemical reactions.

Teflon is a fully-fluorinated chain of carbon atoms. These long molecules bound together make the polymer material that is used in a variety of applications including non-sticky cooking pans.

The Manchester team managed to attach fluorine to each carbon atom of graphene..

To get fluorographene, the Manchester researchers first obtained graphene as individual crystals and then fluorinated it by using atomic fluorine. To demonstrate that it is possible to obtain fluorographene in industrial quantities, the researchers also fluorinated graphene powder and obtained fluorographene paper.

Fluorographene turned out to be a high-quality insulator which does not react with other chemicals and can sustain high temperatures even in air.

One of the most intense directions in graphene research has been to open a gap in graphene's electronic spectrum, that is, to make a semiconductor out of metallic graphene. This should allow many applications in electronics. Fluorographene is found to be a wide gap semiconductor and is optically transparent for visible light, unlike graphene that is a semimetal.

Professor Geim said: "Electronic quality of fluorographene has to be improved before speaking about applications in electronics but other applications are there up for grabs."

Rahul Nair, who led this research for the last two years and is a PhD student working with Professor Geim, added: "Properties of fluorographene are remarkably similar to those of Teflon but this is not a plastic.

"It is essentially a perfect one-molecule-thick crystal and, similar to its parent, fluorographene is also mechanically strong. This makes a big difference for possible applications.

"We plan to use fluorographene an ultra-thin tunnel barrier for development of light-emitting devices and diodes.

"More mundane uses can be everywhere Teflon is currently used, as an ultra-thin protective coating, or as a filler for composite materials if one needs to retain the mechanical strength of graphene but avoid any electrical conductivity or optical opacity of a composite".

Industrial scale production of fluorographene is not seen as a problem as it would involve following the same steps as mass production of graphene.

The Manchester researchers believe that the next important step is to make proof-of-concept devices and demonstrate various applications of fluorographene.

Professor Geim added: "There is no point in using it just as a substitute for Teflon. The mix of the incredible properties of graphene and Teflon is so inviting that you do not need to stretch your imagination to think of applications for the two-dimensional Teflon. The challenge is to exploit this uniqueness."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Were our tetrapod ancestors deaf?

Were our tetrapod ancestors deaf?
2010-11-09
Many changes in the sensory systems of tetrapods are associated with the water-to-land transition. In hearing, one of the crucial elements in detecting airborne sound is the tympanic ear. Surprisingly, the tympanic ear originated independently in the major tetrapod lineages and relatively late after the terrestrial tetrapods emerged – in the Triassic, more than 100 million years after the origin of tetrapods. The major question raised by the researchers Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard, Christian Brandt and Magnus Wahlberg, University of Southern Denmark, and Maria Wilson and ...

Privacy safeguards in Canadian military insufficient: Updated rules needed

2010-11-09
Privacy legislation and protocols to safeguard the health information of members of the military are lacking, and the head of Canada's military must take action to ensure health privacy for all staff, states an editorial in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CAMJ) http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/doi/10.1503/cmaj.101630. Recent violations at Veterans Affairs Canada of privacy regarding sensitive health information raise questions about the military's ability to protect personal health information. "Few of the world's armed forces provide complete confidentiality of personal ...

Mild painkillers in pregnancy are associated with an increased risk of male reproductive problems

2010-11-09
New evidence has emerged that the use of mild painkillers such as paracetamol, aspirin and ibuprofen, may be part of the reason for the increase in male reproductive disorders in recent decades. Research published in Europe's leading reproductive medicine journal Human Reproduction today (Monday 8 November) shows that women who took a combination of more than one mild analgesic during pregnancy, or who took the painkillers during the second trimester of pregnancy, had an increased risk of giving birth to sons with undescended testicles (cryptorchidism) – a condition that ...

Scientists pinpoint key defense against parasite infection

2010-11-09
Scientists have made a significant discovery about how the body defends itself against snail fever, a parasitic worm infection common in developing countries. Researchers studied the immune response in mice infected with snail fever parasites. They found that a particular type of immune cell, known as the dendritic cell, is responsible for triggering the immune system's defence against the invading parasite. The development, by scientists at the University of Edinburgh, could point towards new avenues of research into treatments for the condition, which causes long-term ...

Study examines risk of heterosexual HIV transmission in China

2010-11-09
A new study by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health examines the burden of HIV and sexually transmitted disease among male clients of the commercial sex industry in China's Sichuan province. Since 2007, heterosexual transmission has replaced injecting drug use as the primary transmission mode of all HIV infections in China. The study is available online in advance of publication in the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections. "We found a large burden of syphilis infection coupled with high-risk sexual and substance use behaviors among male ...

Scientist chronicle nanoparticles' journey from the lungs into the body

2010-11-09
BOSTON – Using a novel, real-time imaging system, scientists have tracked a group of near-infrared fluorescent nanoparticles from the airspaces of the lungs, into the body and out again, providing a description of the characteristics and behavior of these minute particles which could be used in developing therapeutic agents to treat pulmonary disease, as well as offering a greater understanding of the health effects of air pollution. Led by investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and the Harvard School of Public Health, the findings are described ...

Climate change: Water reservoir glacier

Climate change: Water reservoir glacier
2010-11-09
Glaciers of large mountain regions contribute, to some extent considerably, to the water supply of certain populated areas. However, in a recent study conducted by Innsbruck glaciologists and climatologists it has been shown that there are important regional differences. The results of the study are published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). In their recently published study the glaciologists and climatologists, headed by Prof. Georg Kaser and Dr. Ben Marzeion from the Institute of Geography of the University of Innsbruck, ...

Close up on hidden galaxies with new cosmic zoom lenses

2010-11-09
Astronomers have discovered a new way of locating a natural phenomenon that acts like a zoom lens and allows astronomers to peer at galaxies in the distant and early Universe. These results are from the very first data taken as part of the "Herschel-ATLAS" project, the largest imaging survey conducted so far with the European Space Agency's Herschel Space Observatory, and are published today (November 4 2010) in the prestigious scientific journal Science. The magnification allows astronomers to see galaxies otherwise hidden from us when the Universe was only a few billion ...

The economic causes and consequences of envy

The economic causes and consequences of envy
2010-11-09
The use of experimental techniques in Economics in recent years has demonstrated that decision making of individuals' is guided not only by an individual's own benefit, but also by material gains that other individuals can have in their social network; in a nutshell, out of envy. But within this research framework there is still another challenge: the discovery of the evolutionary origin of envy and theoretical proof of its possible effects on companies. This is what Antonio Cabrales, Full Professor of the UC3M Economics Department, has tried to do in a new research ...

Study sheds light on aromatase inhibitor joint pain syndrome

2010-11-09
Breast cancer patients are more likely to have joint pain from taking aromatase inhibitors (AIs) if they have advanced stage cancer, according to a study presented at the American College of Rheumatology's annual meeting, held Nov. 7-11, in Atlanta. The study is one of the first to identify factors that increase the likelihood that a patient will suffer joint pain from AI therapy. AIs, the standard adjuvant therapy for post-menopausal breast cancer, can cause joint pain in patients, mostly in the hands and wrists. This pain can sometimes be debilitating. "Patients complain ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Fungal resistance in wheat: preserving biodiversity for food security

’Round midnight: Late-night romance among medaka in near natural setting

Why seismic waves spontaneously race inside the earth

Survival of the greenest: Why world’s oldest organizations are surpassing young upstarts in environmental sustainability

Have female earwigs evolved their forceps as weapons in battles for mates?

Baby's microbiome may protect against childhood viral infection

Diabetes drug shows benefits for patients with liver disease

P2Y12 drugs may be better than aspirin to prevent heart attack and stroke in patients with coronary artery disease

Long-term data show sustained efficacy and safety of zigakibart in patients with IgA nephropathy

Landmark study reveals survival limits of kidney transplantation in older and high-risk patients

Targeting mitochondria to fight leukemia: Rice University-led research team pursues new treatment strategies

Antibiotics taken during pregnancy may reduce preterm births

Vigilance and targeted public health measures are essential in the face of the diphtheria epidemic that has affected vulnerable populations in Western Europe since 2022

New study: Personalized exercise boosts health for people with neuromuscular disease

FAMU-FSU College of Engineering researchers discover universal law of quantum vortex dynamics

AI analysis of ancient handwriting provides new age estimates for Dead Sea Scrolls

As many as 1 in 5 women with a history of pregnancy or testing for pregnancy report using crisis pregnancy centers across 4 US states

Six decades of data on North Atlantic phytoplankton reveal that their biomass has decreased up to 2% annually across most of the Atlantic Ocean, with potentially widespread implications for the wider

GPT-generated educational materials for urological cancer patients, translated by AI into five languages, are rated by doctors as easier to read than human-authored versions while being just as clear,

Ethical considerations for closing projects "well" in the context of withdrawal of USAID

How male mosquitoes target females—and avoid traps

Unlocking the timecode of the Dead Sea Scrolls

Heatwaves greatly influence parasite burden; likely spread of disease

Biggest boom since Big Bang: Hawaiʻi astronomers uncover most energetic explosions in universe

Electrifying results shed light on graphene foam as a potential material for lab grown cartilage

Global team tracks unusual objects in Milky Way galaxy

Surgical ablation during CABG linked to improved survival in patients with preexisting atrial fibrillation, new study finds

New research finds specific learning strategies can enhance AI model effectiveness in hospitals

INRS and ELI deepen strategic partnership to train the next generation in laser science

Cambridge chemists discover simple way to build bigger molecules – one carbon at a time

[Press-News.org] Graphene gets a Teflon makeover