The Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) COMPASS project, hosted by the University of Kent in partnership with the University of Cambridge (UK), ADA University (Azerbaijan), Belarusian State University (Belarus), TNU (Tajikistan) and the University of World Economy and Diplomacy
COMPASS project jointly run by ADA University shortlisted for International Collaboration of the Year at THE Awards 2021 azertag.az - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from azertag.az Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Scientists find new form of magnetism in magnetic graphene knowridge.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from knowridge.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Physicists Discover a Strange New Form of Magnetism Within Magnetic Graphene
9 FEBRUARY 2021
From childhood, we are taught that the world exists in three physical dimensions. That s true, for the most part, but it skips over something quite fascinating: the strange two-dimensional world of nanoscale materials, like the wonder material graphene.
Graphene and its engineered, single-layer counterparts do in fact exist in three dimensions, albeit just barely – sitting right on the fringe, atomically speaking. That s because these so-called 2D materials are only one atom thick, embodying an incredible structural thinness that lends them all sorts of weird powers.
Now, in a new study led by physicists from the University of Cambridge, scientists have pulled off the same kind of magnetic feat with a different two-dimensional material called iron phosphorus trisulfide (FePS
Researchers have identified a new form of magnetism in so-called magnetic graphene, which could point the way toward understanding superconductivity in this unusual type of material.