2D materials: graphene and beyond
Graphene might be the wonder kid of the materials world but other 2D nanosheets also show great promise for novel applications
Read article: 2D materials: graphene and beyond
Thank you for registering with Physics World
If you'd like to change your details at any time, please visit My account
Isabelle Dumé is a contributing editor to Physics World. She has more than 10 years of experience in science writing and editing in condensed-matter physics relating to technology/nanotechnology/biotechnology, astronomy and astrophysics, energy and the environment, biology and medicine. She has an MSc in advanced materials and a PhD in magnetism. In her spare time, she helps to organize cafés scientifiques.
Graphene might be the wonder kid of the materials world but other 2D nanosheets also show great promise for novel applications
Read article: 2D materials: graphene and beyond
Method could help develop sophisticated spintronic memories
Read article: Diamond defect images magnetic domain walls
Phosphorus allotrope is the new 2D material of choice
Read article: Phosphorene sees the light
Different materials integrated into a single electronic device
Read article: Hybrid technology developed for 2D electronics
Tiny rods and cubic cages move deep into tumours
Read article: Shape matters when nanoparticles fight cancer
New insights into molybdenite could lead to better electronics
Read article: Ultrathin material glides from metal to semiconductor
New technique avoids messy, wet chemistry
Read article: Atom-thin sheets are transferred with ease
New graphene-anode cell that produces 1 µW could be used as an ovulation test
Read article: Saliva-powered microbial fuel cell built
Beam is the world's smallest man-made nanomechanical oscillator
Read article: Tiny mechanical resonator made from just four molecules
Nanotube-augmented plants are a "nanobionic" first
Read article: Nanoparticles boost solar-energy capture by plants