Creating two-dimensional materials cannot be found in nature
A team of RMIT University researchers in Melbourne, Australia has successfully developed an ultra-thin 2D material with a thickness just equal to atoms.Road-turning technology turns invisible aircraft
Scientists have sought to develop a structural coating of millions of tiny, hollow carbon globes, tightly packed into a single hexagon, made of carbonized sugar, which can make theHigh tech tattoo from ultra-thin graphene
One day, you could stick a temporary tattoo on your skin in the form of layers of tiny light-emitting diodes.