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May 2012 - We passed one million page views - thanks and Join already :-) September 2010 I am pleased to report that my essay titled A NEW METRIC WITH APPLICATIONS TO PHYSICS AND SOLVING CERTAIN HIGHER ORDERED DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS' has been published by Physics Essays published by the American Institute of Physics and appeared in their June 2010 quarterly. 40 years ago I took an honors degree in applied mathematics from the University of Waterloo. My interest was Relativity and my last year there saw me complete a 900 level course under Hanno Rund on his work in relativity,as well as differential geometry(pure math) and of course analysis. I continued researching new ideas and knowledge since that time and I have prepared a book for publication titled 'Paradigms Shift'. I maintain my blog as a day book and research tool to retain data and record impressions and interpretations on material read. Do take this moment to join my blog and receive Four items of interest daily Monday through Saturday. Since my topics are usually unique or at least obscure, the ads running through adsense are often interesting and worth dipping into while also supporting this blog in a small way.

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Monday, May 30, 2011

Unzipped Graphene





They are now able to produce a straight edged graphene ribbon and this allows them to discover the quantum effects produced.  Again we are advancing out knowledge.  I merely want them to master the cart of producing a continuous ribbon that we can wind with many others to produce the space hook cable between the Earth’s surface and a geostationary station above it.

We are obviously getting there and we will soon see manufacturing protocols producing unbelievable products.

As mentioned and discussed many times before, this will allow us the build MFEV or magnetic field exclusion vessels able to travel into space and throughout our solar system at one G acceleration.  (also called UFOs)

Unzipped graphene reveals its secrets

May 13, 2011


Researchers in the US have made the first precise measurements on the "edge states" of graphene nanoribbons. These states have been predicted to have extraordinary properties and the work could help build improved nanoscale devices in the future.

Graphene is a sheet of carbon just one atom thick and nanoribbons of this material are strips of graphene just nanometres across. Physicists believe that, depending on the angle at which they are cut, such ribbons should have a range of different – and technologically useful – electronic, magnetic and optical properties. These properties include band gaps, such as those found in semiconductors, that do not exist in larger sheets of graphene.

However, until now, scientists have been unable to test these predictions because they could not study the atomic-scale structure at the edges of cut nanoribbons – and therefore ensure their samples have the appropriate edges. This is because as-produced nanoribbons are typically disordered structures with only short stretches of straight edges.

Unzipping carbon

Michael Crommie's team at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) has overcome this problem by looking at specially made nanoribbons with smooth edges using a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM). These ribbons were obtained from Hongjie Dai's group at Stanford University, where they were produced by chemically unzipping carbon nanotubes (rolled up sheets of graphene) – a technique that produces well-ordered, straight edges along the entire length of a nanoribbon.

The researchers discovered that these ribbons support 1D electronic edge states and that electrons in these states are confined to the nanoribbon edge and have an energy gap. "This kind of behaviour has been predicted for many years but never experimentally verified," Crommie told physicsworld.com.

The LBNL–UCB team began by spin coating the nanoribbons onto clean gold crystals. Next, the scientists cooled the nanoribbon-decorated gold crystals down to 6 K and imaged them with an STM. "We were able to see the atomic-scale structure of the nanoribbons and use the STM to measure the local density of states of the edge states – that is, we measured 'where' the electrons are," explains Crommie. "In other words, by measuring the current at the STM tip at different locations near the nanoribbon edge, we were able to determine the spatial distribution of electrons confined near the edge."

"Nanoribbon edge states are real"

Research teams around the world have predicted that the novel electronic, optical and magnetic properties of such nanoribbons edges could be exploited, in principle, to make new types of devices – such as spin-valves, nanoribbon switches, detectors and photovoltaics from graphene. "Our new experimental results bolster the pursuit of these applications because we now know that the nanoribbon edge states are real," says Crommie.

"The work could also help us better understand the basic physics of what happens at the edges of graphene samples", he adds. Edges are as important and as useful as any other part of graphene, especially as the size of nanostructure-based devices is reduced to atomic length scales. "Understanding graphene edge behaviour, however, has lagged behind other graphene research because of the difficulties of preparing and probing smooth graphene edges," says Crommie. "Our new results advance our ability to control and characterize graphene-edge nanostructures and so help to push the field forward and spur new ideas and applications."

Xiaoting Jia of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who was not involved in the work, can see its merits. "This work is a big step towards understanding and controlling the unique electronic properties in graphene nanoribbon edges, and opens up many opportunities in the electronics, spintronics and optical applications of graphene nanoribbons," he says.

Crommie's team is now interested in modifying graphene edges in different ways – for example through electronic doping. "We want to explore nanoribbon edge behaviour under different conditions, both to test theories regarding behaviour in the materials and to perhaps discover new, unexpected phenomena," reveals Crommie. "One of our goals is to fabricate nanoribbon devices that allow us to simultaneously probe atomic-scale nanoribbon structure and device performance, and to correlate these properties."

The results were detailed in Nature Physics 10.1038/nphys1991

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