[Skip Header and Navigation] [Jump to Main Content]
Home
Internet News, Financial , Real Estate, Mortgage, SEO, Health, Travel, Auto
Informative News and Blogs from around the Webosphere

Primary Links

  • Science
  • Adventure
  • Auto
  • Business
  • Economics
  • Health
  • Nutrition
  • Unusual
Home

Strained Graphene Creates Pseudo-Magnetic Fields Stronger Than Any Before Seen

Graphene Nanobubble Graphene nanobubbles can create strong pseudo-magnetic fields, a new study says. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
<!--paging_filter-->

Putting the right kind of strain on a patch of graphene can make super-strong pseudo-magnetic fields, a new study says. The finding sheds new light on the properties of electromagnetism, not to mention the odd properties of graphene, according to researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. When graphene is stretched to form "nanobubbles," the stress causes electrons to behave as if they were subject to huge magnetic fields, the size of which have never been seen in a lab before. The study is published today in the journal Science.

Michael Crommie, a senior scientist in the Materials Sciences Division at Berkeley Lab and a physics professor at the University of California-Berkeley, says this is a completely new effect that has no counterpart in any other condensed matter system.<!--break-->

Since scientists began studying magnetic fields more than 100 years ago, no one has been able to sustain big magnetic fields for very long. The record is 85 tesla -- a measurement of electromagnetism named for Nikola Tesla -- and it only lasted a few thousandths of a second. Make it stronger than that, and the magnets blow themselves apart.

But in Crommie's study, electrons inside carbon atoms behaved as if they were subjected to 300 tesla. It has to do with the way graphene is constructed, which leaves one out of every four valence electrons free to hop around. The other three electrons form tight hexagonal chains. When graphene sheets are strained -- for instance, when they're rolled up into carbon nanotubes or stretched into nanobubbles -- the bond lengths between atoms change, and electrons hop differently.

The effect is so strong that it works at room temperature. Berkeley Lab's news site has a more detailed description here.

The finding could lead to better electronic and magnetic devices, Crommie says. Controlling where electrons exist and how they move is an essential feature of all electronic devices, he notes.

"New types of control allow us to create new devices, and so our demonstration of strain engineering in graphene provides an entirely new way for mechanically controlling electronic structure in graphene," he says.

[Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory]

Source

News

Visit our partner website Webhappenings.com for complete news articles and celebrity headlines.

Other stories from around the web:

Suit: Jewel-Osco parent used 'dirty tricks' to block Wal-Mart
A federal lawsuit has been filed against SuperValu, the parent company of Jewel-Osco, by the developer of a proposed shopping center in north suburban Mundelein claiming the supermarket chain engaged in a "dirty tricks" campaign to block a proposed Wal-Mart store in the complex.
Disease Researchers Try Luring Malaria-Bearing Mosquitoes with Stinky Socks
<!--paging_filter--> Researchers are testing a potent new tool in the fight against malaria: dirty socks. Experiments are underway in three villages to see if smelly socks can lure mosquitoes into poisoned traps as effectively as synthetic chemical baits that can be expensive and complicated to...
Dow average closes within 50 points of 13,000
The Dow has edged teasingly close to 13,000, a marker it hasn’t reached since before the financial crisis brought the U.S. economy to its knees.
Greece latest aid injection approved by eurozone finance ministers
The latest tranche of international aid to Greece has been signed off by eurozone politicians, offering the crisis-hit country a €12bn injection which removes the threat of an immediate default.
Two firms make case to run Illinois Lottery
The Northstar Lottery Group and the Camelot Group made their respective cases Wednesday for why each bidder believes it is best qualified to become the first private manager of the Illinois Lottery.
God's in Mississippi, where the gettin' is good
[More]
Did the music business benefit from iTunes? Consensus is mixed
Today, iTunes is the largest music retailer, has redefined the listening experience and has largely become the way that music is consumed. What’s less clear is how much the music industry benefited.
World on course for next crisis, warns Gordon Brown
The global economy is heading towards another meltdown despite the lessons of the last financial crisis, Gordon Brown has warned.
A New $1,000 Keyboard With Screens For Keys From Art Lebedev, Prettier Than the Last
Art Lebedev Optimus Popularis <!--paging_filter--> Known widely for the ambitious/crazy Optimus Maximus, the first keyboard with OLED screens for keys, Russian design house Art Lebedev has just unveiled its successor, Optimus Popularis. It's a looker. <!--break--> Details don't extend...
#SciAmBlogs Tuesday - DNA Patents, Supernova, Power of Mindset, Bat-Killing Fungus, and more.
News tidbit of the day? The #SciAmBlogs make an appearance in an Onion video (around 1:57-2:04). [More]
[Jump to Top] [Jump to Main Content]