PAPER SENDING SUBSCRIPTION

  • googleplus
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • linkedin
  • linkedin

DYNA JOURNAL ENGINEERING DYNA JOURNAL ENGINEERING

  • Skip to the menu
  • Skip to the content
  • DYNA Publishing
    • DYNA
    • DYNA Energy & Sustainability
    • DYNA Management
    • DYNA New Technologies
  • Journal
    • The Journal and its organs
      • Editors Board
      • Scientific Board
    • History
    • Mission - Vision and Values
    • Annual survey result
    • Frequent asked questions
    • Dissemination and Indexing
    • It is said about DYNA...
    • Collaborate with DYNA
    • Links of interest for engineering
      • FRIENDLY organizations
      • Contributing organizations
      • Engineering Associations
      • Others engineering journals
      • Other interesting links
  • Authors and Referees
    • Guidelines, rules and forms
    • Dissemination and indexing
    • How researchers can collaborate
  • Papers
    • Search
    • Volumes and issues
    • Most downloaded last year
    • Submission of papers
    • Next issue contents
    • Monographic reports
  • News
    • News
    • Newsletters
    • Book Review
    • Software review
  • Blogs and Community
    • Forums
    • How collaborate
  • Subscribing
    • Sign up
  • Advertising
    • Target audience & ad formats
    • Advertising prices
    • Contents for next issue
    • Newsletter
  • Contact
    • How to contact
  • Search
    • In this Journal
    • Search in DYNA journals

Return to the menu

  • Homepage
  • News
  • Book Review

Book Review

16
Sep
2015

Phosphorene: a new competitor for graphene

News

Vote:

Results: 

5 points

 3  Votes

By Alexandra Ossola. Graphene currently sits atop engineering's list of wonder materials. The single layer of carbon atoms exhibits incredible physical strength and flexibility, as well as unique electrical properties.

Phosphorene structure

These characteristics have enabled researchers to use it in everything from phone chargers to water filters. But along one dimension, it disappoints: graphene is not a natural semiconductor. Although engineers are forging ahead to find ways to manipulate it so that it works in transistors -- devices that modify electric currents to power gadgets -- they are also now turning to a promising alternative with a similar structure: a single layer of black phosphorus atoms, called phosphorene.

Under high pressure, phosphorus becomes black phosphorus, a material with superconductive properties discovered about a century ago. Recently, in 2014, a team of researchers at Purdue University isolated just one layer of black phosphorus atoms. Since then, others in the field have started investigating phosphorene. More than 400 papers with the two-dimensional material's name have been published this year alone.

The excitement has mounted over phosphorene's potential to replace less efficient materials in electronics, says Thomas Szkopek, who specializes in 2-D materials at McGill University. Black phosphorus is a "bona fide semiconductor," he says, meaning its conductivity can be switched on and off. Because of this property, engineers can modify how much energy flows through phosphorene across many orders of magnitude. Such control minimizes the amount of current that leaks out, which could bring transistors a step closer to perfect efficiency. Conventional transistors, typically made of silicon, are less efficient than the thermodynamic limit by about a magnitude of a million.

Clasification

Source:
Sciam
Themes:
REVISTA DYNA

Share:  

  • Twittear
  • facebook
  • google+
  • linkedin
  • delicious
  • yahoo
  • myspace
  • meneame
  


Phosphorene: a new competitor for graphene

Chanel. Book review

Search

banner crosscheck

  •  
  • Twitter
  • Twitter
  •  
  • Facebook
  • Facebook
  •  
Tweets por el @revistadyna.
Loading…

Anunciarse en DYNA 

© Engineering Journal Dyna 2025 - UK Zhende Publishing Limited

Address: Unit 7 Wilsons Business Park, Manchester M40 8WN United Kingdom

Email: office@revistadyna.com

  • Menu
  • DYNA Publishing
    • DYNA Publishing
    • DYNA
    • DYNA Energy & Sustainability
    • DYNA Management
    • DYNA New Technologies
  • Journal
    • The Journal and its organs
      • The Journal and its organs
      • Editors Board
      • Scientific Board
    • History
    • Mission - Vision and Values
    • Annual survey result
    • Frequent asked questions
    • Dissemination and Indexing
    • It is said about DYNA...
    • Collaborate with DYNA
    • Links of interest for engineering
      • Links of interest for engineering
      • FRIENDLY organizations
      • Contributing organizations
      • Engineering Associations
      • Others engineering journals
      • Other interesting links
  • Authors and Referees
    • Guidelines, rules and forms
    • Dissemination and indexing
    • How researchers can collaborate
  • Papers
    • Papers
    • Search
    • Volumes and issues
    • Most downloaded last year
    • Submission of papers
    • Next issue contents
    • Monographic reports
  • News
    • News
    • Newsletters
    • Book Review
    • Software review
  • Blogs and Community
    • Blogs and Community
    • Forums
    • How collaborate
  • Subscribing
    • Sign up
  • Advertising
    • Target audience & ad formats
    • Advertising prices
    • Contents for next issue
    • Newsletter
  • Contact
    • How to contact
  • Search
    • In this Journal
    • Search in DYNA journals

Regístrese en un paso con su email y podrá personalizar sus preferencias mediante su perfil


: *   

: *   

:

: *     

 

  

Loading Loading ...