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A new 'periodic table' for nanomaterials
https://phys.org/news/2018-07-periodic-table-nanomaterials.html
Bottom-up fabrication of graphene nanoribbons is receiving much attention due to their potential use in electronics, tissue engineering, construction, and bio-imaging. One way to synthesise them is by using bianthracene precursor molecules that have bromine functional groups attached to them. The bromine groups interact with a copper substrate to form nano-sized chains. When these chains are heated, they turn into graphene nanoribbons.
Packwood and Hitosugi tested their simulator using this method for building graphene nanoribbons.
A new 'periodic table' for nanomaterials
Jul 24, 2018, 11:23am UTC
https://phys.org/news/2018-07-periodic-table-nanomaterials.html
> Bottom-up fabrication of graphene nanoribbons is receiving much attention due to their potential use in electronics, tissue engineering, construction, and bio-imaging. One way to synthesise them is by using bianthracene precursor molecules that have bromine functional groups attached to them. The bromine groups interact with a copper substrate to form nano-sized chains. When these chains are heated, they turn into graphene nanoribbons.
> Packwood and Hitosugi tested their simulator using this method for building graphene nanoribbons.