Twisting 2D materials uncovers their superpowers

Researchers can now grow twistronic material at sizes large enough to be useful. While an exciting potential area of nanotechnology, twistronics until now has mostly been explored on samples smaller than human hairs. Now researchers can produce samples on the centimetre scale.

Source: sciencedaily.com

Related posts

Ancient arachnid from coal forests of America stands out for its spiny legs

Anti-diabetic treatment associated with reduced risk of developing blood cancer

Zombie cells in the sea: Viruses keep the most common marine bacteria in check