Brown: Research Finds Surprising Electron Interaction in 'Magic-Angle' Graphene
March 19, 2021
March 19, 2021
PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, March 19 (TNSJou) -- Brown University issued the following news:
In 2018, physicists showed that something interesting happens when two sheets of the nanomaterial graphene are placed on top of each other. When one layer is rotated to a "magic angle" of around 1.1 degrees with respect to the other, the system becomes a superconductor -- meaning it conducts electricity with zero resistance. Even more exciting, there was evidence that it was an uncon . . .
In 2018, physicists showed that something interesting happens when two sheets of the nanomaterial graphene are placed on top of each other. When one layer is rotated to a "magic angle" of around 1.1 degrees with respect to the other, the system becomes a superconductor -- meaning it conducts electricity with zero resistance. Even more exciting, there was evidence that it was an uncon . . .
