Graphene was first isolated in 2004 and the Nobel Prize in physics was awarded in 2010 to the two researchers who performed the work at the University of Manchester, UK.
Since then, graphene has been steadily developing and a whole landscape of two-dimensional (2D) materials has been discovered. Graphene has been found to be the strongest, lightest material known. It is now being manufactured on an industrial scale.
This new material will transform many industries. In this talk Rob and Adrian, from the Graphene Engineering and Innovations Centre on Sackville Street, will explain what graphene is, its latest applications, and how it will enable the ultimate civil engineering project: The Space Elevator.
The talk is structured as follows:
• What is graphene and the other 2D materials
• How graphene is already finding more uses than you might realise
• How rockets work and their limitations
• What is a space elevator and how it overcomes these limitations
• The state of the art in tethered lift manufacturing
• Could a space elevator really be built?
Adrian and Rob delight in explaining commercial activity and complex science in plain language, so you don’t have to be an expert to enjoy this talk. Bring your questions and they will answer as many as they can.
Adrian is a member of the board of directors of the International Space Elevator Consortium (ISEC). He is also the founding editor of the Nixene Journal, a monthly publication that tracks the academic and commercial activity of graphene and 2D materials worldwide.
Rob is the CEO of Nixene Publishing, he contributed to the commercialisation module for PhD students at the Graphene NOWNANO Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) and shared an international panel with Nobel Prizewinner Prof Sir Kostya Novoselov, “A series of varied perspectives on our 2D futures”.
They are based at the Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre (GEIC), on the University of Manchester campus in the UK.
Rob & Adrian regularly present the science in plain English to audiences ranging from the general public, to universities, NASA and the USA government.
Who Should Attend?
Questions to Reflect On
Practical Information
The presentation will include time for questions and discussion. Booking is strongly advised.
Access
Access to the event is via the Altrincham Street entrance.
Accessibility Information
Please contact us regarding any specific accessibility requirements you may have by emailing [email protected]
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