Slashdot Mirror


World's First Single-Atom-Thick Fabric

neutron_p writes "Researchers at The University of Manchester have made the world's first single-atom-thick fabric, which reveals the existence of a new class of materials and may lead to computers made from a single molecule. They call it graphene, because it's 'webbed' by extraction of individual planes of carbon atoms from graphite crystal. The nanofabric belongs to the family of fullerene molecules, which were discovered during the last two decades, but is the first two-dimensional fullerene."

5 of 390 comments (clear)

  1. Can it cut things? by CoreyGH · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Seriously, does this mean the edge of the fabric is really sharp? Can it cut through stuff?

    1. Re:Can it cut things? by Amiga+Lover · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I want to know, if you had a sheet of this stuff about 1cm by 1cm... could you see it? does light permeate it? refract off it in rainbows?

    2. Re:Can it cut things? by k98sven · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Seriously, does this mean the edge of the fabric is really sharp? Can it cut through stuff?

      Nope. It's not rigid.

      But.. if you could add a layer on top of that layer, juxtaposed by the minimal amount (half of a ring, see this picture of graphite crystal structure), and then add another layer, and another..

      Then you could form a 'perfectly sharp' knife.

      I'm not sure how durable it'd be though, because the inter-layer bonds in graphite are rather weak.

  2. Would someone be allergic to it? by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Something that small and fine could possibly become airborne and eventually irritate allergic responses.

    Not to mention that consumption of the material could lead to carcinogenic effects.

    Before we start throwing around phrases like "wonder material" and "the future is now", perhaps we should take a closer look at the health risks involved in making/using these practically invisible materials.

    1. Re:Would someone be allergic to it? by Sir+Holo · · Score: 5, Interesting


      Something that small and fine could possibly become airborne and eventually irritate allergic responses.

      Nah, it has to be micron-scale (1000x larger) for your lungs to recognize it as foreign, and eject it. Like it does with dust.

      Not that that's a good thing. People get asbestosis and silicosis for just this reason. Sharp particles that are beneath detection become embedded. And if they aren't broken down and stay sharp, they cut, cut, cut at the cellular level for the rest of your life.

      As for graphene becoming airborne, lodging in the lungs, and never breaking down, who knows?