What if there were a way to suck carbon dioxide right out of the air and turn it into useful products?
While our gadgets these days are constantly getting smaller and more powerful, the development of commercial batteries both small enough and with sufficient capacity to feed their power-hungry demands has not quite kept pace.
A resilience to extreme conditions by the most transparent, lightweight and flexible material for conducting electricity could help revolutionise the electronic industry, according to a new study.
Scientists have created sheets of flexible graphene by burning a cheap polymer with a laser.
The ambitious plan of Czech technology developers is to use the wonder material graphene to build a smartwatch.
A new graphene oxide foam is super strong and can bounce back after being stretched and compressed.
What if there were a way to suck carbon dioxide right out of the air and turn it into useful products?
While our gadgets these days are constantly getting smaller and more powerful, the development of commercial batteries both small enough and with sufficient capacity to feed their power-hungry demands has not quite kept pace.
A resilience to extreme conditions by the most transparent, lightweight and flexible material for conducting electricity could help revolutionise the electronic industry, according to a new study.
Scientists have created sheets of flexible graphene by burning a cheap polymer with a laser.
The ambitious plan of Czech technology developers is to use the wonder material graphene to build a smartwatch.
A new graphene oxide foam is super strong and can bounce back after being stretched and compressed.