Graphene typically costs $200,000 per ton. Now, scientists can make it from trash.

Graphene is insanely useful, but very difficult to produce — until now.

Recent technology developed at Rice University is taking the idea that one man's trash is another man's treasure to its extreme. Banana peels, coffee grounds, single-use plastic containers, coal — all of these and more are being turned into one of the most valuable materials around: graphene. Chemist James Tour and his team have developed a rapid process that can transform bulk-quantities of junk into flakes of graphene.

Think Big

Link to article.
TourResearchGroupLogo 400x253

JM Tour News

Connect with us

Smalley-Curl Institute and the NanoCarbon Center
6100 Main St. MS 222
Houston, TX 77005

  • dummy713-348-6246

  • Lab Manager: Dustin James, Ph.D.
  • dummy dustin@rice.edu

  • dummy713-348-6247

TourLogo

Search