РОССИЙСКАЯ АКАДЕМИЯ НАУК УРАЛЬСКОЕ ОТДЕЛЕНИЕ ИНСТИТУТ ХИМИИ TBEPДОГО ТЕЛА |
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30.07.2007 | Карта сайта Language |
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'Graphene has few intrinsic charge carriers but remains conductive,' team member Andre Geim, of the University of Manchester, told Chemistry World. 'So when you add just a single electron it changes the resistivity significantly.' Geim said that it should be possible to functionalise the surface of graphene to detect defined species. 'We are talking about the possibility of increasing the sensitivity of gas sensors by orders of magnitude,' Geim said. 'Graphene has the ultimate sensitivity because in principle it cannot be beaten - you cannot get more sensitive than a single molecule.' David Williams, a gas sensor expert from the University of Auckland in New Zealand, told Chemistry World: 'To count gas molecules on and off a surface using a simple, robust and stable device operating at room temperature is a major achievement.' He added, 'Whilst practical application of the results is some way off, the device appears to be very robust, simple and stable.' "Graphene has the ultimate sensitivity because in principle it cannot be beaten - you cannot get more sensitive than a single molecule" - Andre Geim, University of Manchester Rob White, Product Marketing Manager of UK-based City Technology Ltd, a company that manufactures gas sensors, described the research as 'potentially very interesting.' White said, 'There is considerable legislative drive to reduce the measurement limit of sensors in line with reducing exposure limits and any technology seeking to achieve this has significance for us. In addition, the gas species characterised in the paper is a molecule of concern in the markets we address.' Simon Hadlington Interesting? Spread the word using the 'tools' menu on the left. ReferencesF Schedin et al, Nature Materials, 2007, DOI: 10.1038/nmat1967
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