Graphene Reacts Based on Material Beneath It, Continues to Amaze
Most compositions react to different chemicals due to the nature of their atomic structure and other similar factors. This, apparently, is one of those things that doesn’t necessarily apply to graphene. When layered on top of various materials, a one-atom-thick sheet of the stuff can exhibit drastically different properties. This includes both how the graphene reacts chemically with other materials introduced to the sheet and how it conducts electricity.
The experiments, conducted at MIT, showcased this kind of behavior. Structurally speaking, graphene always exists on top of a secondary material. It’s otherwise too thin. When that secondary material is silicon dioxide, the graphene reacts when exposed to specific chemicals. However, in contrast, if that secondary material is boron nitride, the exact same chemicals provoke little reaction from the graphene. The bonds formed by the graphene are directly influenced by what’s going on just beneath the stuff.
Graphene is so thin that it’s actually influenced by the electrical fields of the atoms underneath it. The group performing the experiments had to come up with a new electron-transfer theory just to explain their results. Graphene layered over these secondary materials, as well as any that have yet to be discovered, could eventually lead to a surface of the same material that reacts in specific ways to different stimuli in different areas.
One of the examples presented is if researchers wanted to cause specific delicate biomolecules to react without actually disrupting them. A layer of graphene could potentially solve that problem. That’s just one of the many ways graphene can be utilized, of course. The stuff can actually create electricity when struck by light. There’s sure to be even more properties out there just waiting to be discovered.
(via MIT News, image credit via U.S. Army Materiel Command)
- Graphene creates electricity when struck by light
- This graphene sheet is stronger than steel, thin as paper
- Sheet of graphene can patch their own holes, even
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