Another Step Towards Graphene Semiconductors
derGoldstein writes "Ars has an article up about the two latest 'papers demonstrating that, if you change the way the graphene stacks, you obtain a voltage-controlled bandgap ... Between these two papers, a fairly complete understanding of the bandgap behavior in three-layer graphene has been obtained, leaving only the challenge of making the stuff.'"
I'm having trouble peering thru the journalist filter and not finding any other primary sources.
To a first approximation, the point seems to be that what we used to be able to do with bi-layer two layer graphene, we can now do with tri-layer three layer graphene. Um, OK, thats nice but not "new".
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/1001/1001.5213v1.pdf
So, aside from purely theoretical "thats interesting, just for the sake of physics", what is the point? More durable, better electrical properties, easier to make (thats hard to believe), stronger, easier to customize and control the above, or what? Someone with access to Nature-Physics to read the actual papers could probably respond?
The article is really poor because it tapdances around the important story which is what I list above.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger