nanosurface 2008-06-22 10:48
令人惊奇的石墨烯【评论】
[b][size=4][color=Red]Surprising Graphene[/color][/size]
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[size=3]Honing in on graphene electronics with infrared synchrotron radiation[/size] [/b]|8y'^ ws?$I`wY
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【纳米科技世界论坛讯】Graphene is the two-dimensional crystalline form of carbon: a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in hexagons, like a sheet of chicken wire with an atom at each nexus. As free-standing objects, such two-dimensional crystals were believed impossible to create — even to exist — until physicists at the University of Manchester actually made graphene in 2004.[/b][/color]V?4~_8Z'w D
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[color=DimGray]Graphene is a two-dimensional crystal consisting of a single layer of carbon atoms arranged hexagonally. [/color]
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Now researchers at the Department of Energy's Advanced Light Source (ALS), from DOE's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the University of California at San Diego (UCSD), and Columbia University, have measured the extraordinary properties of graphene with an accuracy never before achieved.$fY,he@tKS
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The results confirm many of the strangest features of the unusual material but also reveal significant departures from theoretical predictions. And they point the way to novel practical applications, such as tunable optical modulators for communications and other nanoscale electronics.
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The studies were performed by Zhiqiang Li, an ALS Doctoral Fellow from Dimitri Basov's laboratory at UCSD, working with colleagues at Columbia University in New York and the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Florida, and with Berkeley Lab's Michael Martin, who manages the Fourier Transform Infrared beamline 1.4.4 at the ALS. The researchers report their findings in the June issue of the journal [i]Nature Physics[/i].
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[b]Graphene's promising electronic properties[/b]
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