Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Nobel Prize for Work on Graphene

The 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov for their "groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material graphene".

Graphene is an allotrope of carbon, it is the thinnest and strongest material known. It conducts electricity as well as copper and outperforms all other materials as a conductor of heat. It is almost completely transparent, yet it is so dense that not even helium, the smallest known gas atom, can pass through it.

Geim and Novoselov extracted graphene from a piece of graphite such as is found in "lead" pencils. Using a piece of adhesive tape they obtained a flake of carbon that was just one atom thick, which is the allotrope known as graphene.

Reference:
http://static.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2010/info_publ_phy_10_en.pdf


Further Reading
Allotropes
Elements

Study Questions:
  1. What is meant by the term allotrope?
  2. Name two other naturally occurring allotropes of carbon.
  3. Draw a table listing the physical properties of both of these allotropes and graphene.
  4. Discuss the similarities and differences between these allotropes.
  5. Draw a possible structure for graphene.
  6. Describe the similarities and differences between the structure for graphene that you have drawn and the structures for the other two allotropes in your table.
  7. Using your structure for graphene, explain the similarities and differences between the physical properties of graphene and the other two allotropes.

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