The rise of graphene

Graphene is a rapidly rising star on the horizon of materials science and condensed-matter physics. This strictly two-dimensional material exhibits exceptionally high crystal and electronic quality, and, despite its short history, has already revealed a cornucopia of new physics and potential applications, which are briefly discussed here. Whereas one can be certain of the realness of applications only when commercial products appear, graphene no longer requires any further proof of its importance in terms of fundamental physics. Owing to its unusual electronic spectrum, graphene has led to the emergence of a new paradigm of ‘relativistic’ condensed-matter physics, where quantum relativistic phenomena, some of which are unobservable in high-energy physics, can now be mimicked and tested in table-top experiments. More generally, graphene represents a conceptually new class of materials that are only one atom thick, and, on this basis, offers new inroads into low-dimensional physics that has never ceased to surprise and continues to provide a fertile ground for applications.

by A. K. GEIM AND K. S. NOVOSELOV from Nature (truncated)

Graphene is the name given to a flat monolayer of carbon atoms tightly packed into a two-dimensional (2D) honeycomb lattice, and is a basic building block for graphitic materials of all other dimensionalities. It can be wrapped up into 0D fullerenes, rolled into 1D nanotubes or stacked into 3D graphite. Theoretically, graphene (or ‘2D graphite’) has been studied for sixty years, and is widely used for describing properties of variouscarbon-based materials. Forty years later, it was realized that graphene also provides an excellent condensed-matter analogue of (2+1)-dimensional quantum electrodynamics, which propelled graphene into a thriving theoretical toy model. On the other hand, although known as an integral part of 3D materials, graphene was presumed not to exist in the free state, being described as an ‘academic’ material and was believed to be unstable with respect to the formation of curved structures such as soot, fullerenes and nanotubes. Suddenly, the vintage model turned into reality, when free-standing  graphene was unexpectedly found three years ago — and especially when the follow-up experiments confirmed that its charge carriers were indeed massless Dirac fermions. So, the graphene ‘gold rush’ has begun.

In the absence of quality graphene wafers, most experimental groups are currently using samples obtained by micromechanical cleavage of bulk graphite, the same technique that allowed the isolation of graphene for the first time. After fine-tuning, the technique now provides high-quality graphene crystallites up to 100 μm in size, which is sufficient for most research purposes. Superficially, the technique looks no more sophisticated than drawing with a piece of graphite8 or its repeated peeling with adhesive tape until the thinnest flakes are found. A similar approach was tried by other groups but only graphite flakes 20 to 100 layers thick were found.

At low temperatures, all metallic systems with high resistivity should inevitably exhibit large quantum-interference (localization) magnetoresistance, eventually leading to the metal–insulator transition at σ ≈ e2/h. Such behaviour was thought to be universal,
but it was found missing in graphene.

Despite the reigning optimism about graphene-based electronics, ‘graphenium’ microprocessors are unlikely to appear for the next 20 years. In the meantime, many other graphene-based applications are likely to come of age. In this respect, clear parallels with nanotubes allow a highly educated guess of what to expect soon. The most immediate application for graphene is probably its use in composite materials. Indeed, it has been demonstrated that a graphene powder of uncoagulated micrometre-size crystallites can be produced in a way scaleable to mass production. This allows conductive plastics at less than one volume percent filling, which in combination with low production costs makes graphene-based composite materials attractive for a variety of uses. However, it seems doubtful that such composites can match the mechanical strength of their nanotube counterparts because of much stronger entanglement in the latter case. Another enticing possibility is the use of graphene powder in electric batteries that are already one of the main markets for graphite. An ultimately large surface-to-volume ratio and high conductivity provided by graphene powder can lead to improvements in the efficiency of batteries, taking over from the carbon nanofibres used
in modern batteries. Carbon nanotubes have also been considered for this application but graphene powder has an important advantage of being cheap to produce. One of the most promising applications for nanotubes is field emitters, and although there have been no reports yet about such use of graphene, thin graphite flakes were used in plasma displays (commercial prototypes) long before graphene was isolated, and many patents were filed on this subject. It is likely that graphene powder can offer even more superior emitting properties. Carbon nanotubes have been reported to be an excellent material for solid-state gas sensors but graphene offers clear advantages in this particular direction. Spin-valve and superconducting fieldeffect transistors are also obvious research targets, and recent reports describing a hysteretic  magnetoresistance and substantial bipolar supercurrents prove graphene’s major potential for these applications. An extremely weak spin-orbit coupling and the absence of hyperfine interaction in 12C-graphene make it an excellent if not ideal material for making spin qubits. This guarantees graphene-based quantum computation to become an active research area. Finally, we cannot omit mentioning hydrogen storage, which has been an active but controversial subject for nanotubes. It has already been suggested that graphene is capable of absorbing a large amount of hydrogen, and experimental efforts in this direction are duly expected.

It has been just a few years since graphene was first reported, and despite remarkably rapid progress, only the very tip of the iceberg has been uncovered so far. Because of the short timescale, most experimental groups working now on graphene have not published even a single paper on the subject, which has been a truly frustrating experience for theorists. This is to say that, at this time, no review can possibly be complete. Nevertheless, the research directions explained here should persuade even die-hard
sceptics that graphene is not a fleeting fashion but is here to stay, bringing up both more exciting physics, and perhaps even wideranging applications.

Ghanaian President John Atta Mills dies in office

John Evans Fifii Atta Mills (21 July 1944 – 24 July 2012) the former Ghanaian politician who was President of Ghana from 2009 until his death in 2012. He was inaugurated on 7 January 2009, having defeated the ruling party candidate Nana Akufo-Addo in the 2008 election.He was Vice-President from 1997 to 2001 under President Jerry Rawlings, and stood unsuccessfully in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections as the candidate of the National Democratic Congress (NDC). He died  24 July 2012 at the 37 Military Hospital in Accra. He is the first Ghanaian head of state to die in office.

Ghanaian President John Atta Mills was said to spread the wealth from Ghana’s newly discovered offshore oil fields, but his death came before the 68-year-old could finish his first term in this West African nation still held up as a model of democracy.

Ghanaian state-run television stations broke into their regular programming to announce the president’s death. Chief of Staff John Henry Martey Newman informed the nation about his death at a military hospital in the capital. The 37 Military Hospital was initially built during the second world war. The hospital mainly provided healthcare to the military. It has recently had a big expansion and caters for all kinds of cases. It now caters for the general public as well. No details were provided about the cause of death, but some news accounts said he had throat cancer. Vice President John Mahama was sworn in Tuesday to complete the last 5months of Mr. Mills’s term.

Chris Fomunyoh, the senior director for Africa for the Washington-based National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, said that Ghana’s democracy could weather the death of a president.

In other nations in West Africa, the death of a ruler usually spells a coup, as it did in Guinea after the 2008 death of longtime dictator Lansana Conte, and Togo, where the military seized power after the president’s death in 2005 to install his son.

Ghana, whose economy has been fueled by gold, cocoa and timber exports in the past, hopes to put its oil money to good use, mindful of how nearby Nigeria suffered through military dictatorships and widespread corruption over its oil wealth.

Mr. Mills even put up campaign posters of himself standing next to a cutout of Barack Obama in an effort to emphasize that he, too, stood for change.

In March, Mr. Mills traveled to the United States, where he met with President Obama. The Ghanaian leader also traveled to the United States in April as well, as rumors about his health began to circulate in Ghana. Opposition newspapers had recently reported that he was not well enough to run for a second term.

Mr. Mills also served as vice president under Jerry Rawlings, a coup leader who was later elected president by popular vote and surprised the world by stepping down after losing the 2000 election.

John Evans Atta Mills was born July 21, 1944, in Tarkwa, Ghana. He spent much of his career teaching at the University of Ghana. He earned a doctorate from London’s School of Oriental and African Studies before becoming a Fulbright scholar at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif.

Survivors include his wife, the former Ernestina Naadu, and a son.

Egypt’s president names new prime minister

CAIRO  — Egypt’s president on Tuesday appointed a young, independent U.S.-educated Cabinet minister as the new premier, assigned to turn the nation’s economy and internal security around after 17 months of instability and protests.
Kandil is the minister of water resources and irrigation in the outgoing military-appointed government.

by Agence Presse (from yahoo)

The designation of Hesham Kandil comes nearly a month after President Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood was sworn in as Egypt’s first freely elected civilian president. The time it took just to select a prime minister reflects the difficulties Morsi has had in putting together an administration.

“Patience is required,” Kandil said in a short televised address after his appointment was announced. Delivering what he said was a shared message from him and the president, Kandil called for unity and expressed confidence that the Egyptian people would overcome serious challenges.

The military, which took power after the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak last year, still holds the final say over much of Egypt’s governing, leaving it unclear what the new prime minister’s powers will be.

Still in doubt is whether Kandil and Morsi will be able to name the heads of key ministries overseeing foreign relations, state budgets and security forces, where there is deep resistance to the Brotherhood president. Already the military has said that it, not the civilian government, appoints the defense minister.

Kandil, an engineer in his 40s, will have to consult with the president before naming Cabinet ministers.

Morsi had promised to pick someone from outside the Brotherhood to lead a unity government that would include other political factions. Kandil does not have any affiliation with Islamist groups or political parties, state TV said.

Kandil is believed to be religious on a personal level, wearing a light beard and interspersing his past comments to the news media with religious references.

Emad Gad of the liberal Social Democratic Party said many of the people suggested for prime minister did not want the job because they felt the post would be just a vehicle to execute Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood’s program, known as “the Renaissance project,” aimed at overhauling the government and economy.

Gad said he believes the Brotherhood’s executive council had considerable say in Kandil’s selection.

“They brought in someone who is not from the Brotherhood, but whose ideology is similar,” he said.

Morsi’s spokesman, Yasser Ali, said the “the appointment of a patriotic, independent figure was studied and discussed” in order to find someone capable of managing the current situation.

The spokesman for the ultraconservative Islamic Al-Nour Party said Kandil’s selection came as a surprise, but he is an acceptable choice.

“He has many issues to deal with, starting with lawlessness,” Yousseri Hamad said. Al-Nour indicated it would consider joining the new government if asked.

Kandil is the minister of water resources and irrigation in the outgoing military-appointed government. He earned his masters and doctorate degrees at the University of North Carolina and worked at the African Development Bank, focusing on Nile Basin countries. He was part of an observer mission for Egypt in talks with Sudan on Nile River water issues.

He was brought into the government after Mubarak’s fall, serving under Prime Minister Kamal el-Ganzouri, 78, a Mubarak-era prime minister reappointed to the post by the military in late 2011.

Differences between the Brotherhood, which held the most seats in parliament before the legislature was dissolved last month, and the outgoing Cabinet has so far cost Egypt a vital inflow of financial assistance.

Because of the turmoil in the country, which dried up tourism and foreign investments, Egypt’s foreign currency reserves dropped by more than one-half since the popular uprising. Cairo asked the International Monetary Fund for a $3.2 billion aid package. The IMF insists on political consensus in Cairo before approving the loan.

The Brotherhood has been at odds with the Cabinet’s spending and repaying scheme for the loan, and that has stalled its approval.

Since Morsi’s win, the Brotherhood has also been squeezed by the military’s grip on authority. Just before he took office, the military dissolved parliament, which was led by the Brotherhood and other Islamists, and the generals took over legislative powers as well as other points of authority.

Although Morsi’s spokesman on Tuesday reiterated the president’s support for a unity government that brings in a vast array of political forces, some in the opposition want no part in it.

Gad said his Social Democratic Party, which won just a handful of seats in parliament, will not join the new government because its failures and successes should be the Brotherhood’s alone to shoulder.

“They have their own Renaissance project that they want to execute. We are not convinced of their program, so we will not take part in it,” Gad said.

What if Low Energy Nuclear Reaction (LENR) really works?

A careful Brain Storm about the near future. What we can expect if the abstrous becomes reality.

By Christopher Calder  (from OpEdNews.com)

What is happening right now with LENR technology?

Engineer Andrea Rossi claims to be in talks with a well known giant American retail chain store to sell his 10 kilowatt home heating LENR reactors, which he calls E-Cats, short for Energy Catalyzer.  The retail price is expected to be about $1,500 each, with mass production beginning in the fall of 2012.  Can Rossi get government approval to sell unconventional nuclear reactors for home use?  Rossi states his heaters will output 6 times more energy than fed into them, and they produce no pollution of any kind.  A Greek company called Defkalion Green Technologies states they will start selling their similar Hyperion reactors in a matter of months, and their improved design outputs 25 to 32 times energy input and has longer lasting fuel that is easier to refill. Defkalion claims they have scalable reactor systems up to 5 megawatts (heat) in size, with the largest power plants built into ordinary 20 foot long shipping containers. Both Rossi and Defkalion use low cost nickel dust and ordinary hydrogen gas as nuclear fuel.


NASA speculation on Rossi E-Cat reactor by NASA

NASA’s Dr. Joseph Zawodny also uses nickel powder and hydrogen gas for fueling his low energy laser driven LENR experiments, and Zawodny states that LENR is “A cheap, abundant, clean, scalable, portable source of energy [that] will impact EVERYONE.” He goes on to say that LENR is the “Singular solution to peak oil, climate change, fresh water, and associated geopolitical instabilities.” NASA scientist Dennis Bushnell agrees, and states that LENR can provide NASA with the highly concentrated energy needed to make space travel within our solar system cost effective, as well as bring a permanent end to the energy crisis.

Is this all a hoax, a mirage, or some incredible miscalculation? Rossi’s E-Cat reactors have passed every hands-on test to date by at least a dozen respected scientists from around the world. Rossi claims to have already sold 13 one megawatt E-Cat reactors to an unnamed US military customer, speculated to be DARPA or similar stealth research organization. Zawodny says that LENR reactors can be made small enough to power a mechanical dragonfly, or large enough to electrify an entire city. Perhaps there is an infectious bug going around making scientists all over the world hallucinate positive test results. Critics say that this is all too good to be true, and that there is nothing in our text books that can explain LENR with traditional physics.

The potential military uses of LENR are enormous, which is why the United States intelligence community is especially interested in finding out all it can about advances in LENR technology. Meanwhile, many corporations, scientists, and Internet pundits with financial and/or personal attachments to competing fields of energy production are praying that LENR blows up in our faces, both figuratively and literally. There are often shockingly inaccurate and unfair criticisms of Andrea Rossi and other LENR pioneers posted on the Internet. Despite abundant Internet skepticism and our television media’s strange disinterest, NASA’s Dennis Bushnell states that “The two decades of experiments and the weak interaction theories have removed the existential risk, what is remaining is to ENGINEER for improved performance.”

What will happen to the world if LENR is not a hoax?

Honda, Toyota, and Mitsubishi are already financing LENR research. From the energy density data available, it appears that we may be able to build LENR powered cars that rarely, if ever, need nickel dust refueling. All that would be required is the occasional adding of ordinary tap water to make the needed small amount of hydrogen gas through on-board electrolysis of H2O. LENR fuels are by nature thousands of times more energy dense than fossil fuels used to produce heat through simple combustion.

If LENR is real, then aircraft capable of flying at full speed for months on end without refueling will be possible. Vertical takeoff and landing aircraft could become commonplace, and flying wingless cars as seen in Star Wars movies will be buildable for those brave or reckless souls who don’t worry about the potential for engine failure. LENR jet engines should be relatively quiet, resulting in nearly silent aircraft sailing through the skies.

Zawodny claims that reusable single stage LENR powered space planes will be able to take off from any commercial airport, fly to orbit to deliver satellites, and then land like an ordinary jetliner. This would not only lower the cost of satellite launches, but would allow the cost effective construction of very large space stations. Trips to the moon would become relatively cheap and commonplace, and trips to Mars with active radiation shielding would be possible with a 3 month travel time each way. Space travel could be pursued by private corporations for commercial, industrial reasons, not just by governments. We won’t be able to fly to the stars with LENR, but our solar system would become easily navigable at a price we can afford.


Proposed NASA LENR space plane in orbit by NASA

Proposed NASA LENR space plane details by NASA

LENR researchers predict electrical generation at a cost of between 3 to 5 cents per kilowatt hour for small home units, and 1 to 2 cents per kilowatt hour for large, gigawatt sized power stations. If this is true, then over time all coal, natural gas, and fission nuclear power stations will be dismantlement, and industrial windmills will be torn down and sold as scrap. Ships, trains, cars, everything will be LENR powered, and thus everything we need to survive will fall in price because everything we consume requires energy to produce and transport, most importantly food. LENR would make desalination of water affordable, which could end the global water crisis and allow for increased agricultural production. Oil will always be needed to make chemicals, but if LENR works as hoped in 30 to 50 years fossil fuels will no longer be needed as a significant source of energy.

LENR by it’s inherent nature produces no radiation risk, no toxic waste, and all the materials used to construct LENR reactors are easily recyclable. We have enough nickel fuel to last for millions of years, so our constant worrying about running out of affordable energy will disappear. Just understanding this fact could radically change the global geopolitical situation, with obvious major impact on Middle East politics and military alliances.  LENR may be an impossible dream, but I cannot comprehend how so many respected scientists from around the world could claim so many positive test results if there were not something to it. Scientific frauds cannot pass even one hands-on test by experts, but Rossi’s E-Cats have already passed many well designed tests conducted by PhD scientists who have no financial motivation or bias.

Andrea Rossi has tried to hide the secrets of his E-Cat reactor design, and he has reason to worry because so far the United States Patent Office has refused to give any LENR researcher patent protection. Defkalion Green Technologies came into existence by first working with Rossi and then splitting off to develop their own similar, but not identical design. There are vast amounts of money to be made if LENR really works, but unfortunately for Rossi his E-Cat design already appears to be obsolete. Defkalion’s Hyperions are by any measure superior products if the company’s specification sheets are accurate.

Only time will tell what is true and what is fiction. We should all hope that LENR is real, because without it escalating energy prices will cause further economic collapse, tremendous hardship, and even more global hunger on an unprecedented scale.

Trayvon Martin’s parents reject George Zimmerman’s apology

The fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman took place on February 26, 2012, in Sanford, Florida, United States. Trayvon Martin was a 17-year-old African American teenager who was unarmed. George Zimmerman, a 28-year-old multi-racial Hispanic American, was the designated neighborhood watch coordinator for The Retreat at Twin Lakes, the gated community where the shooting took place.

By Jason Sickles (Yahoo!) et al.

While in his vehicle on a private errand, Zimmerman saw Martin walking inside the community, where Martin and his father were visiting his father’s fiancée. Zimmerman called the Sanford Police Department to report Martin’s behavior as “just walking around, looking about,” which he described as suspicious. Martin was not armed and according to police there was no evidence he was committing a crime.  Shortly afterwards, Zimmerman left his vehicle and there was a fight, which ended with Zimmerman fatally shooting Martin once in the chest at close range.

When police arrived on the scene, Zimmerman told them that Martin had attacked him and that he had shot Martin in self-defense. Zimmerman was bleeding from the nose and from two vertical lacerations on the back of his head. EMTs treated Zimmerman at the scene, after which he was taken to the Sanford Police Department. Zimmerman was detained and questioned for approximately five hours.A statement was videotaped, and he was then released without being charged. Police said that they had not found evidence to contradict his assertion of self-defense.

The parents of Trayvon Martin say they have a hard time accepting George Zimmerman’s nationally televised apology.

Last night, in his first interview since killing the unarmed 17-year-old, the former neighborhood watch volunteer said the shooting death must have been part of “God’s plan” and that he prays for the Martin family daily.

“I simply really don’t know what God George Zimmerman is worshipping because there’s no way that the God that I serve had in his plans for George Zimmerman to murder my son,” Tracy Martin, the teen’s dad told CBS News.

Zimmerman, a licensed gun carrier in Florida, shot and killed Martin in February during a confrontation in the gated neighborhood where Zimmerman lived and Martin was visiting a family friend. Zimmerman said he thought Martin looked suspicious and was following him so he could give police his whereabouts.

But before officers arrived, Zimmerman, 28, says the black teen physically attacked him and that he was forced to shoot in self defense. The incident has polarized the country, with some calling the killing a hate crime.

“I’m not a racist and I’m not a murderer,” said Zimmerman, who is white and Hispanic.

Zimmerman maintained his innocence during the Fox News interview, but did ask for forgiveness for any pain he’s caused.

“I want to tell everyone, my wife, my family, my parents, my grandmother, the Martins, the city of Sanford and America, that I’m sorry that this happened,” he said, staring into the camera lens. “I hate to think that because of this incident, because of my actions, it’s polarized and divided America. And I’m truly sorry.”

Sybrina Fulton, Trayvon’s mother, told CBS News she doesn’t believe what he says.

“He also said that he doesn’t regret anything that he did that night,” Fulton said. “I don’t think God would have him, in his plan, to murder an innocent child.”

Portable Solar Power Kits for Africa: Now in the U.S., via Kickstarter

There’s a widespread informal energy market in Africa. Electricity sockets can be difficult to find and people walk (sometimes far distances) to charge their cellphones with diesel generators. San Francisco-based company Fenix International developed the ReadySet Solar Kit three years ago to help solve Africans’ energy problems — and now they’re trying to bring it to the U.S. by using a campaign. ( This story originally published on Mashable )

“The Fenix ReadySet is an intelligent battery system that can be charged from solar, electric grid, and even a bicycle generator to charge mobile phones, tablets, WiFi hotspots and other devices,” the company says.

It’s a valuable technology for rural areas of Africa, but CEO Mike Lin sees a need for it in the U.S., too.

As Lin told Mashable, there are many Americans who cannot access solar power because of where they live. Apartment renters typically can’t install solar panels on the roofs of their buildings, and neither can college students if they live in dorms.

But users of the ReadySet can hang the panel out the window and collect a charge.

Lin says the ReadySet was designed for the developing world, but there are many uses for it in the developed world. Power your iPhone, iPad or Android devices — or any number of other household items that run on electricity. The video shows the ReadySet powering a fan, a small latern and a speaker. With its two USB ports and two car lighter ports, the ReadySet is also a smart purchase for avid campers.

Each kit comes with:

  • A ReadySet battery
  • 15 Watt Solar Panel with rugged aluminum frame
  • Power Adapter for grid charging
  • 3 Watt LED light with socket, cable and switch
  • USB Universal battery charger for charging any 3.7-volt Lithium battery
  • Instruction Manual

The ReadySet can power approximately 10 phones on a full charge, or more than 12 hours of continuous video playback on your iPad. It can fully charge from the included 15 W solar panel in six to eight hours of sun.

If you need more power, you can add a second or third panel just by plugging it in (the ReadySet’s software handles all the settings and configuration). If you’re lacking sunshine, you can charge the ReadySet from a normal wall outlet using the included 23W grid charger.

Lin and COO Brian Warshawsky were formerly Apple employees. They set out to create not only a sustainable business, but a sustainable product.

The team raised more than $40,000 in the first 48 hours of its campaign, surpassing its $20,000 goal. Currently, the project has brought in more than $66,000 of funding with 21 days to go.

Kickstarter campaigns often offer a price break for early adopters. Right now the ReadySet is listed at $225, but Lin says it will likely retail for $300. Compared to other portable chargers such as the ($69-$79), which is not solar, and the ($16) which is a DIY kit harnessing solar power, the ReadySet is a bit pricey.

Logitech also offer a number of gadgets to power your Apple devices , which retail for $80 and up — although they won’t power fans and lights.

Recently, Lin and his team returned from a trip to East Africa where they forged a partnership with MTN, Africa’s largest mobile network operator, to sell the kits for $150 through the provider. Lin said the entrepreneurs who buy these chargers from MTN make the money back in about two months, and the provider will earn about 10 to 14% more revenue from having customers who use their phones more often because those devices are charged.

The average American earns . In Uganda, where the company often deals, the was $511.90, according to the United Nations.

There, the price of ReadySet is $150 — about 30% of the average yearly income per individual.

The team debated whether or not to charge for the ReadySet Solar Kits in Africa, but feared it wouldn’t be a sustainable business model if they didn’t. If they offer a free product now, customers will always expect that, he said. Here’s how he put it: If you got a free car, you wouldn’t treat it as well as a car you purchased.

Lin says the sales from the U.S. will support Fenix so they can do more in Africa. “We saw a great opportunity having worked with Apple, and we wanted to take our skills and apply it to something that would have a greater benefit to the world,” Lin said.

In Africa, in many area. The basic cellphone provides necessary communication in rural areas, in particular. A pregnant woman might need to call a doctor; a business owner might need to find out the price of his goods in the neighboring village.

designs renewable energy products for entrepreneurs in Africa. The company’s goal is to create products that deliver energy to the 1.5 billion people in the world who lack access to electricity.