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Researchers discover how "explosive percolation" turns GO paint extremely conductive

University of Sussex scientists, along with teams from Spain's Instituto de Carboquímica (ICB-CSIC) and Instituto de Nanociencia de Aragon (INA), UK's University of Brighton, France's Institut des Materiaux Nantes Jean Rouxel and Rice University in the U.S, have demonstrated how a conductive paint coating that they have developed mimics the network spread of a virus through a process called 'explosive percolation' a mathematical process which can also be applied to population growth, financial systems and computer networks, but which has not been seen before in materials systems. The process of percolation the statistical connectivity in a system, such as when water flows through soil or through coffee grounds is an important component in the development of liquid technology. And it was that process which the research group was expecting to see when they added graphene oxide to polymer latex spheres, such as those used in emulsion paint, to make a polymer ....

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Highly-Conductive Polymer Nanocomposites Mimic Virus Spread Through 'Explosive Percolation'

In new research published in Nature Communications, University of Sussex scientists demonstrate how a highly conductive paint coating that they have developed mimics the network spread of a virus through a process called 'explosive percolation' – a mathematical process which can also be applied to population growth, financial systems and computer networks, but which has not been seen before in materials systems. ....

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