South Korean scientists add value to new kind of graphene
Non-conductive, super-permeable substance to benefit seawater desalination
By Yoon Sung-won
Researchers in South Korea have developed a synthesis method for a new type of graphene that will benefit new applications including seawater desalination, according to Samsung Electronics and Sungkyunkwan University.
Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology (SAIT) researchers and Sunkyunkwan University’s advanced materials science and engineering professors have jointly researched the original technology to synthesise the large-area monatomic amorphous graphene allotrope on germanium semiconductor wafers.
The study on the new type of graphene, which is non-conductive and super-permeable, is featured in the international scientific journal “Science Advances” under the title “Realisation of continuous Zachariasen carbon monolayer.”
“If an amorphous two-dimensional material that allows penetration of water but not ions is developed, it can be used for seawater desalination,” a member of the research team said.
Discovered in 2004, graphene is one of the rare known 2D nanomaterials. It has been known to be composed of a hexagonal lattice of carbon atoms.
The previously known type of graphene has high electrical and thermal conductivity and is highly durable. It is over 100 times more electrically conductive and more than 200 times more durable than steel. Also, it is impermeable. Such characteristics have made graphene a “dream” material for high-performance electronic devices such as wearable display panels and semiconductor chips, as well as medical uses such as drug delivery and condoms.