This Graphene Energy Harvester Can Do It All
A new graphene energy harvester aims to be the Swiss Army Knife of remote sensors, capable of drawing power from six different local sources.
A new graphene energy harvester aims to be the Swiss Army Knife of remote sensors, capable of drawing power from six different local sources.
If you follow the news about e-bikes, you’re probably well aware of how many fires have been attributed to e-bikes in the last few years. And while the majority of e-bike owners will never experience their electric two-wheeler bursting into flames, it does happen from time to time, and because … [continued]
As the electric vehicle market matures, battery recycling and reuse rapidly becomes a bigger deal. Battery recycling is a long established practice, but never before at the scale we will see for lithium-ion batteries from electric cars and trucks. One might think there’s nothing new under the sun in this … [continued]
Tiny Luxembourg aims to dominate the graphene nanotube market for next-generation EV batteries and other sustainable tech.
Brothers in Rice lab find audio from graphene production contains valuable data Originally published on Rice University, Rice News. By Mike Williams It may be true that seeing is believing, but sometimes hearing can be better. Case in point: Two brothers in a Rice University laboratory heard something unusual while … [continued]
The race is on to build the solar-powered Evs of the future, and it looks like graphene and TMDs could get the ball rolling.
Nanotech Energy says it has developed a graphene lithium battery that can charge up to 18 times faster than a conventional lithium-ion battery and has higher energy density. But it offers no documentation of its claims.
Graphene is the nanomaterial of the next millennium and it could make the hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicle dream come true.
The killer solar cell combo of perovskite and graphene is about to shake off the laboratory dust and venture out into the field.
Researchers at the University of Exeter have created graphene-infused concrete that is twice as strong but has far lower carbon emissions than ordinary concrete.