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The gold standard: Researchers use nanoparticles to make 3-D DNA nanotubes 1/2/2009

Gold nanoparticles for controlled drug delivery 12/31/2008

Enhancing solar cells with nanoparticles 12/25/2008

Researchers make breakthrough in the production of double-walled carbon nanotubes 12/24/2008

Study on cytotoxicity of carbon nanotubes 12/23/2008

New research to exploit world's thinnest material 12/19/2008

Researchers create non-toxic clean-up method for potentially toxic nano materials 12/18/2008

Researchers print dense lattice of transparent nanotube transistors on flexible base 12/17/2008

Nanotubes sniff out cancer agents in living cells 12/16/2008

Nature, nanotechnology fuse in electric yarn that detects blood 12/16/2008

Method sorts out double-walled carbon nanotube problem 12/15/2008

Panel blasts federal nanotech risk research strategy 12/14/2008

People in the US and the UK show strong similarities in their attitudes toward nanotechnologies 12/13/2008

Nanotechnology 'culture war' possible, says study 12/12/2008

For nano, religion in US dictates a wary view 12/11/2008

Researchers discover method for mass production of nanomaterial graphene (11/12/2008)

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graphene

Graphene is a perfect example of the wonders of nanotechnology, in which common substances are scaled down to an atomic level to uncover new and exciting possibilities.

Graphene is created when graphite - the mother form of all graphitic carbon, which is used to make the pigment that allows pencils to write on paper - is reduced down to a one-atom-thick sheet. Graphene is among the strongest materials known and has an attractive array of benefits. These sheets - single-layer graphene - have potential as electrodes for solar cells, for use in sensors, as the anode electrode material in lithium batteries and as efficient zero-band-gap semiconductors.

Research on graphene sheets has been restricted, though, due to the difficulty of creating single-layer samples for use in experiments. But in a study published online Nov. 9 in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, researchers from UCLA's California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) propose a method which can produce graphene sheets in large quantities.

Led by Yang Yang, a professor of materials science and engineering at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering, and Richard Kaner, a UCLA professor of chemistry and biochemistry, the researchers developed a method of placing graphite oxide paper in a solution of pure hydrazine (a chemical compound of nitrogen and hydrogen), which reduces the graphite oxide paper into single-layer graphene.

Such methods have been studied by others, but this is the first reported instance of using hydrazine as the solvent. The graphene produced from the hydrazine solution is also a more efficient electrical conductor. Field-effect devices display output currents three orders of magnitude higher than previously reported using chemically produced graphene. Kaner and Kang's co-authors on the research were doctoral students Vincent Tung, from Yang's lab, and Matthew Allen, from Kaner's lab.

"We have discovered a route toward solution processing of large-scale graphene sheets," Tung said. "These breakthroughs represent the future of graphene nanoelectronic research."

The coverage of the graphene sheets can be controlled by altering the concentration and composition of the hydrazine solution. This hydrazine method also preserves the integrity of the sheets, producing the largest-area graphene sheet yet reported, 20 micrometers by 40 micrometers. A micrometer is one-millionth of a meter, while a nanometer is one billionth of a meter.

"These graphene sheets are by far the largest produced, and the method allows great control over deposition," Allen said. "Chemically converted graphene can now be studied in depth through a variety of electronic tests and microscopic techniques not previously possible."

"Interdisciplinary research of this sort is a benefit of collaborative institutes like the CNSI," said Kaner, who is also an associate director of the CNSI. "Graphene is a cutting-edge nanomaterial and one which has great potential to revolutionize electronics and many other fields."

There are two methods currently used for graphene production - the drawing method and the reduction method, each with its own drawbacks. In the drawing method, layers are peeled off of graphite crystals until one is produced that is only one-atom thick. When likely graphene suspects are identified from the peeled layers, they must be extensively studied to conclusively prove their identity. In the reduction method, silicon carbide is heated to high temperatures (1100ฐ C) to reduce it to graphene. This process produces a small sample size and is unlikely to be compatible with fabrication techniques for most electronic applications.

"This technology (hydrazine reduction) utilizes a true solution process for graphene, which can dramatically simplify preparing electronic devices," said Yang, who is also faculty director of the Nano Renewable Energy Center at the CNSI. "It thus holds great promise for future large-area, flexible electronics."

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of California - Los Angeles

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