Scientists In China Predict Pentagonal Graphene
TechkNighT_1337 writes: Chinese scientists made calculations and predict that a new 2D allotrope of carbon based in a pentagonal form resembling a common pavement in the streets of Cairo can be synthesized. They call this new form penta-graphene. From the announcement in the Chemistry World, they say: "The team found that not only should a pentagon-containing version of graphene be fairly stable, it should also be stronger than conventional graphene and be able to withstand higher temperatures, up to 730C. It would also be a natural semiconductor, unlike conventional graphene, which is a highly efficient conductor and has to be chemically modified to turn it into a semiconductor."
Where's my space elevator!?
Let me be the first to predict Hexagonal Graphene.
While I'm at it, I'd like to also predict the following:
A sequel to 50 Shades
Future tension in the middle east
Hershey's coming out with a white chocolate syrup
Taco Bell being the only survivor of the restaurant wars
Facebook to soon cause an uproar due to a perceived privacy violation
Ninjas don't carry tic tacs
based in a pentagonal form
"Based on" would be better, but still wouldn't be right. Molecule shapes aren't really "based on" anything, they just look like things sometimes.
resembling an common pavement
"An/a" aside, what's a "common pavement"?
in the streets of Ccairo
That's the c-capital of Egypt, right?
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
Yes. Graphene does not "melt". it sublimates at very high temperatures. That's why graphite crucibles are used in foundries.
Actually, the inclusion of a pentagonal allotropic unit inside a carbon nanotube (just rolled up graphene) was one of the first laboratory examples of a pure carbon semiconductor.
WAAAAY back in 1997
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10...