Interesting Engineering on MSN
Japanese startup unveils 3D graphene structure built for faster-charging batteries
At CES 2026, Japanese startup 3DC is presenting a new three-dimensional graphene nanomaterial designed to improve ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Graphene is getting a sustainability upgrade and industry is watching
Graphene has long been sold as a wonder material, but the real story in 2025 is how quickly it is being reshaped around ...
(Nanowerk News) The device you are currently reading this article on was born from the silicon revolution. To build modern electrical circuits, researchers control silicon’s current-conducting ...
Graphene is often described as a wonder material. It is strong, electrically conductive, thermally efficient, and remarkably versatile. Yet despite more than a decade of excitement, many ...
Graphene, also known as the wonder material, continues to surprise scientists. This time, it has revealed new quantum states. A team of researchers has found peculiar topological electronic crystals ...
Adisyn has cleared its first real graphene technical hurdle with independently verified low-temperature deposition that ...
An international research team led by the University of Göttingen has demonstrated experimentally that electrons in naturally occurring double-layer graphene move like particles without any mass, in ...
Research reveals the ballistic movement of electrons in graphene in real time. The observations could lead to breakthroughs in governing electrons in semiconductors, fundamental components in most ...
The findings, obtained at the Ultrafast Laser Lab at the University of Kansas, could open the way for significant advancements in the control of semiconductor electrons, which are essential elements ...
It seems graphene, the single layer of carbon atoms that can supercharge computer chips, optical circuits, lithium-ion batteries, and solar power generation, might have a competitor: a rare earth ...
(Nanowerk News) An international research team led by the University of Göttingen has demonstrated experimentally that electrons in naturally occurring double-layer graphene move like particles ...
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