Graphene is a 2-dimensional form (allotrope) of carbon that is formed from nanolayers that are only one atom thick, with the atoms arranged in a honeycomb-shaped planar lattice. It behaves like a semi-metal, allowing heat and electricity to flow easily along its plane, but not transversely. As a bulk material, it absorbs light strongly across all visible wavelengths, yet it is nearly transparent in single sheets. Microscopically, it is the strongest material on earth as each atom is double-bonded to each of its three neighbors. This rigidity creates an exceptionally high electron mobility, measured at 15 000 cm2/Vs (compare this value to those in Table 1), so it conducts electricity better than silver.
Graphene additionally exhibits several unusual electrical properties: it is strongly affected by an external magnetic field, allowing sensitive hall-effect sensors to be built that can operate well at both room temperature and at cryogenic temperatures (down to less than 1°K above absolute zero) and it can be used to make graphene-based FETs (gFETs) that can be used as biosensors.
A gFET uses a liquid gate where charged biomolecules affect the channel current, allowing measurements based on ions rather than charge injection. This permits real-time measurements to be made of proteins, biomolecules and nucleic acids, enabling such cutting-edge technologies such as CRISPR gene editing, RNA drug research, detecting the presence of infectious diseases in humans, plants and animals, and cancer research.
Research is continuing into the unique electrical properties of graphene that may open up development of new kinds of electronic devices. One area of development is spintronics, where information can be stored in the angular momentum of electrons (spin-up or spin-down). The regular and rigid array structure of graphene may be an ideal carrier material for a room temperature, atomic level, spintronic non-volatile memory (NVM) which would be faster than conventional RAM and yet retain all the data when switched off.