Flash GRAPHENE [2020]

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  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2020
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    From Trash To Flash GRAPHENE [2020]
    Finding cheaper ways to make high quality graphene in bulk, took the scientific world by storm and so far, there are at least 16 different methods of making it but few of them are capable of mass production at a low cost and high quality.
    As of current times the price of graphene per kilogram stands in between $67 - $200 dollars per kilogram depending on the overall quality of the end product. It is only a few hundreds of dollars away from silver at $579/kg.
    But to bring the price down one would have to miraculously solve many of the other methods problems such as; be able make graphene out of almost anything that is carbon rich, get rid of solvents or chemical additives, no special environments like vacuum or inert gas atmosphere, and lastly it has to yield large quantities of usable graphene.
    Sources
    spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/s...
    newatlas.com/materials/high-v...
    • Rice lab makes pristin...
    silverprice.org/silver-price-...
    www.theworldcounts.com/challe...
    www.esbnyc.com/sites/default/...
    ourworldindata.org/plastic-po...
    www.grandviewresearch.com/ind...
    NOTE: The animations in my videos take a substantial amount of time to make, so please be patient. I am trying to get a video per week, but some times it takes longer.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 366

  • @offbeatwithcookie
    @offbeatwithcookie Před 4 lety +177

    Your hilarious dry text messages in corner or on places where you think youve just written an explanation are so underrated

    • @Jay80501
      @Jay80501 Před 4 lety +1

      WTF is a dry text Message? Captain Insult

    • @CleetusGlobin
      @CleetusGlobin Před 3 lety +2

      Jay80501, have you never heard of dry humor before? Presumably, because it’s text, it comes off as being dry (also known as deadpan), since you can’t portray emotion easily through text.

    • @UnaRams
      @UnaRams Před 3 lety +1

      @@CleetusGlobin the real gems here

  • @spoonikle
    @spoonikle Před 4 lety +186

    "make recycling financially profitable" As long as energy is cheap and abundant you can recycle anything profitably.

    • @haworthluke
      @haworthluke Před 4 lety +27

      Yes this is the way we need to look at most of our problems. hopefully, fusion can save us and do it in a timely fashion.

    • @stefanb6539
      @stefanb6539 Před 4 lety +9

      As long as pumping fresh oil is cheaper, plastic recycling is doomed. If the price of oil went up just a tiny touch, a lot of plastic recycling would be suddenly economically viable.

    • @stefanb6539
      @stefanb6539 Před 4 lety +7

      @@haworthluke Fusion, timely? Every new and improved version of fusion reactors takes decades to finance and build. IF everything goes perfectly well, there might be ONE energy positive fusion reactor prototype by 2050.

    • @haworthluke
      @haworthluke Před 4 lety +6

      ​@@stefanb6539 "Timely" as in before we destroy ourselves, I'm fully aware these things take time. I would wager that you are about 20 years off though and we will have an energy positive reactor by 2030. I just hope something comes along because we are fucked if not

    • @lucasatilano8008
      @lucasatilano8008 Před 4 lety +6

      They could tax emissions to reflect the true cost

  • @luciferlyset7543
    @luciferlyset7543 Před 4 lety +46

    Something to keep in mind: Even if plastic is recycled it is not necessarily recycled a second time.

    • @luciferlyset7543
      @luciferlyset7543 Před 4 lety

      @james83925 I got the point, but graphene isn't here yet so for now it's something to keep in mind.

    • @skilz8098
      @skilz8098 Před 2 lety

      @@luciferlyset7543 No, actually graphene is already here, but it's in its early or infant stages and it is starting to gain traction. They are already starting to use it in Battery Technology...

  • @colincampbell767
    @colincampbell767 Před 3 lety +9

    "With none of the problems."
    Translation: 'A new set of problems that we cannot anticipate.'
    Technological progress is - all too frequently - creating something that will create a new set of problems in order to solve existing problems.

    • @cherylm2C6671
      @cherylm2C6671 Před 3 lety

      Reminds me of Ambrose Bierce, “Conservative, n. A statesman who is enamored of existing evils, as distinguished from the Liberal, who wishes to replace them with others.”

  • @widget3672
    @widget3672 Před 4 lety +8

    Man, I love these videos - so much depth and detail, beautiful illustrations and not too sensationalist when handling new-science subjects. I'm glad your channel exists.

  • @0neBadMonkey
    @0neBadMonkey Před 4 lety

    There's not enough love for the work you put into these videos Zero. Thank you.

  • @JanneWolterbeek
    @JanneWolterbeek Před 4 lety

    Just shared it on Twitter with following text (because you deserve it): "Subject Zero Science makes very, very, very good videos, with amazing scientific insight and good puns/humor and awe-inspiring production value. This is another such gem!"

  • @davidhuertas5089
    @davidhuertas5089 Před 4 lety +18

    Still. can't believe how undersubscribed this insightful deep and elegant this channel is, truly a hidden gem.

    • @jamesnolan6450
      @jamesnolan6450 Před 4 lety +2

      CZcams doesn't prioritize quality content anymore

  • @MrRolnicek
    @MrRolnicek Před 4 lety +67

    Graphene is the wonder material of the future that everyone wants to work with.
    That's true but apparently they all want to work with large sheets of it, ideally single grain (crystal) and not these microscopic particles created by this method.

    • @635574
      @635574 Před 4 lety +14

      For chips yeah hit many other uses dont require big sheets

    • @witherock2886
      @witherock2886 Před 4 lety +12

      for instance the concrete strengthening can be done with small sheets, although I agree larger ones might yield better results, but still

    • @martiddy
      @martiddy Před 4 lety +6

      The video mentioned that this method can be upscale to a bigger production of process.

    • @MrRolnicek
      @MrRolnicek Před 4 lety +25

      @@martiddy Upscaling means you can convert a larger bulk of material into a larger ammount of the same microscopic flakes of graphene.

    • @Barskor1
      @Barskor1 Před 4 lety +5

      Look into microwave reformation of graphene you can turn the small flakes into usable sheets.

  • @wolfbear7
    @wolfbear7 Před 4 lety +11

    Desalination using graphene alone will change the world.

    • @alephkasai9384
      @alephkasai9384 Před 4 lety

      @Froggy Noddy Can't graphene help immensely with solar panel efficiency? Or was that CNT?

  • @dakrontu
    @dakrontu Před 4 lety +26

    Q1. Graphene particles are extremely tough. As a surface coating, they can be used to kill bacteria and disrupt viruses. Are they then a bio-hazard, like asbestos particles?
    Q2. Can you recycle a product containing graphene (which may make it extremely tough, almost indestructible), without massive use of energy?
    Q3. What do we do if air, water, and soil, are strewn with trillions of graphene particles that can damage living cells? What if they get into the food chain? What biological processes IF ANY within a living creature would be able to capture and render harmless the near-indestructible graphene particles?

    • @xXtHeUnDeAd1Xx
      @xXtHeUnDeAd1Xx Před 4 lety +3

      For Q1 since this is the element Carbon we're talking about, even if graphene gives off airborne dust, the element is much heavier than asbestos thus can't travel as far and fall to the ground much faster. I believe it's not a cause for concern unless you're breathing in large amounts of whatever breaks off. Let's say worst case scenario you would get lung disease but that's from carbon black, which graphene has a different structure to so would potentially be much less harmful overall IMO.

    • @michaelleue7594
      @michaelleue7594 Před 4 lety +4

      Graphene is biologically active. It can be toxic, but it isn't non-biodegradable, and the amounts being discussed in the article this is referencing are well below dangerous levels.

    • @dekutree64
      @dekutree64 Před 4 lety +11

      1. What makes asbestos so nasty is that it fractures into thinner and thinner shards, which also means more numerous shards. Graphene on the other hand is super tough, so it won't fracture. But it may still function as a single atom thick blade, slicing up your DNA the same way asbestos does. So the danger probably depends on whether graphene flakes can be contained in nodules (like silica dust, leading to silicosis if you breathe enough of it, but not cancer), or if they slice their way back out and continue damaging other cells.
      2. I'm curious about this as well. My guess is no.
      3. Yep, that would be a disaster. Definitely need some animal testing to assess the danger.

    • @mrspeigle1
      @mrspeigle1 Před 4 lety

      I don't think it'll be that much of a problem but it's definitely something that needs more research
      graphene-flagship.eu/graphene-oxide-biodegrades-with-help-of-human-enzymes

    • @gameresearch9535
      @gameresearch9535 Před 4 lety

      @dakrontu
      Graphene is made of carbon atoms, we are made of a specific percent of carbon, and we eat the carbon in our food. A lot of food is usually thrown away every day by families, such as dinners, which has a lot of carbon in it.
      Carbon becomes Graphite, and Graphite (also in our Graphite pencils) becomes Graphene.
      If you google search, trying to eat too much Graphite would just make you maybe throw it back up.
      If you eat lead, it's poison, so there is a big difference.
      And the worst Graphite would do, which was also given in an example, would be if you were to put a pencil down your throat, you would choke, that's the worst situation, because it's basically pointing out that carbon is safe, because it's in all living things (that we know so far and on the Earth).
      If someone asks if Graphene is safe, point to your window "required that nothing is in the way", and point to the grass and trees outside, which have carbon atoms in them, because supposed all living things on (Earth) that we know so far, is all made of carbon, or rather.. "all organic life" on Earth.
      Also to point out, other planets have carbon on them.
      Could other life on other planets be made of something else? Possibly, we don't know.
      After all, the universe is strange, things run backwards, even clouds on other planets, there are pink and cotton candy planets, and so much more. Also Quantum Physics where Black Holes brake down the reality we know, into possibly other dimensions. Because as Physics is updated and going into Quantum Physics, so too does our reality change with it "given the level of advance that we go through around us", otherwise the reality we understand is only seen different by what we know, once it advances then it changes all around us and clearly with what you see. Though our Universe with Quantum Physics, is far different than the reality we know (so far).. on Earth, which too is updated and going into Quantum Physics, Graphene and Quantum Technologies.
      Our body also has energy much like the flow on Graphene, stop and think about that with Protons, Electrons and so on. Once you start to understand that, you will start to think about Photons (light) particles such as the rays of light coming through the window or other forms of it that are safer, which is where Photonics will replace electronics = electricity = Electrons. Now imagine Fusion Energy converted to the grid being Photonics instead of Electrons. Also to point out, if we do create our own Photons with Ion - Trapped Quantum Computers, is it possible they don't have an electric charge? If so, imagine Photonics running through your homes without being shocked or chance of the house burning down. Spintronics with Graphene and Photonics would be amazing. And Spintronics with Graphene is already a thing.
      Also I wanted to point out that at the melting point for Graphene, it doesn't melt into a liquid, it goes through a process called sublimation, where it turns into a gas state. And so it can form back into Graphene with specific methods that we use for taking the carbon pollution out of the air now and convert it into Graphene, some companies are doing this, I don't remember where which companies.
      This means that if we had a space ship that ever started to melt into a gas "if it ever was to get to that temperature, which would not happen when entering the atmosphere of the Earth using a Graphene space ship", by the time it melts into a gas, our emerging technology would be mature enough to instantly transform it back into Graphene, but that's a ways off. Again you would have to actually melt Graphene to get to that situation, and so if Graphene ever flakes, at some point.. we will have the technology to shape it again, I don't expect that kind of technology to instantly reshape it any time soon.
      If you are interested in learning about Graphene turning into a gas at extreme temperatures which could replace SpaceX's rockets / Starships heat shields with Graphene as space ships, check out my other channel's playlist called "Graphene with starships".
      Go to my channel, find Technology Research and go there, check for the playlist "Graphene with starships".
      And then go to my Graphene playlist after that, don't forget to check out all the other playlists and playlist descriptions on my other channel for also articles and other info, links to official websites and so on.

  • @idanceforpennies281
    @idanceforpennies281 Před 4 lety +6

    The very simple economics for recyclability is if it's cheaper to manufacture the new product than to recycle old product, then it ain't ever going to be recycled. Boom. So expensive to produce, but very easy to recycle products like aluminium and steel are a no-brainer. Most plastics cost more to recycle than to make new. I don't know what the solution to this is, but those are the facts.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 Před 3 lety +2

      Heat it up till it melts and then inject it into depleted crude oil deposits? Basically - put it back where it came from.

    • @steven21736
      @steven21736 Před 3 lety

      @@colincampbell767 very high energy

    • @skilz8098
      @skilz8098 Před 2 lety

      @@colincampbell767 How many times do various parents have to tell their children to put their toys away and to clean up their rooms? Yeah, putting things back isn't a natural human behavior, it's something that has to be taught, learned and reinforced through discipline... I don't see that happening anytime soon!

  • @WashingtonSanchez
    @WashingtonSanchez Před 4 lety +34

    Basically Mr Fusion from Back to the Future, but for graphene (Mr Graphene)

  • @the_phoenix__08
    @the_phoenix__08 Před 4 lety +2

    This technique can be used on NASA lunar base and Spacex martian base for recycling plastic they brought to produce graphene which will make them achieve 80% sufficiency and combined with 3D printing technology it can help them produce all types of tools and material they need there.

  • @Edudg
    @Edudg Před 3 lety

    Amazing Video! Thank you, Subject Zero

  • @jaspercggroot
    @jaspercggroot Před 4 lety +21

    i want to like this video more. It gives me hope for the future :)

    • @camielkotte
      @camielkotte Před 4 lety +2

      Maybe if we keep hitting like-dislike-like etc together we can mess up YT algorithm and have this vid spread like crazy??

  • @imjody
    @imjody Před 4 lety

    Thank you very, very much for your beautiful work as always, SZS. ❤

  • @vgames1543
    @vgames1543 Před 4 lety +3

    Interesting as always👍
    Say, could you make videos on other Metamaterials like for example Aerogel as well?

  • @0cool966
    @0cool966 Před 4 lety +2

    The problem is easy to solve. Ban selling most fresh food in plastic, ban selling soda in plastic, etc. When I was young all soda was in glass, food like meat was sold at butchers wrapped in paper. Also make companies pay for plastic recycling upfront. In fact all companies should have recycling plan for what they sell and if they don't have it, they should not be able to sell it.

  • @gonzalomorenoandonaegui2052

    Thank you for the good content and visuals

  • @Muuip
    @Muuip Před 4 lety

    Great concise and purposeful animation/narration of humanity's goals and ideals. Much appreciated! 👍

  • @DrSanaullahkhan98
    @DrSanaullahkhan98 Před 8 měsíci

    What a great idea and a great demonstration, too the point practical approach ,which can bring initiative at the level to participate in graphene production, all the best and keep it up....

  • @NikolaNevenov86
    @NikolaNevenov86 Před 4 lety +7

    what I'm missing in that video, is the visual explanation of what happens during the Flash process. How does the carbon waste becomes graphene and how it structures itself to be of good quality.

    • @koningsbruggen
      @koningsbruggen Před 4 lety +1

      Same

    • @adarshsrivastav2925
      @adarshsrivastav2925 Před 4 lety +1

      During flash all bond get broken and carbon rearrange itself in graphene and fill it's void by other elements present in plastic.

    • @royk7712
      @royk7712 Před 4 lety

      its a new tech, maybe its not fully tested under electron microscope yet

  • @YouChube3
    @YouChube3 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you, great video

  • @AraAra-zc2eb
    @AraAra-zc2eb Před 4 lety +23

    I foresee a shock movie by Michael Moore denouncing graphene pollution in the near future.

    • @Barskor1
      @Barskor1 Před 4 lety +2

      The funny thing is every Moore movie was done with the same BS levels.

    • @feuerderveranderung6056
      @feuerderveranderung6056 Před 3 lety +1

      To be honest, Graphen can probably act like coal dust or asbestos, if it enters the lung.

  • @legotechnicmastery
    @legotechnicmastery Před 4 lety +70

    Liking that old STARSHIP version 😀
    Are you a graphene scientist ?

  • @ActiveDuke
    @ActiveDuke Před 3 lety

    Very nice video !!!

  • @jigglypuff4227
    @jigglypuff4227 Před 4 lety

    Amazing video!

  • @theDubleD
    @theDubleD Před 4 lety

    Very excited for the energy movement that's happening. Making waste into graphene to make safer more durable products, and all of the talk about solid state batteries/million mile battery is so awesome!

  • @DJVARAO
    @DJVARAO Před 3 lety

    Great content and visuals! BTW is it made on Blender?

  • @TinyGiraffes
    @TinyGiraffes Před 4 lety +53

    0:26 wait wait wait. STOP I want to see you name every single item with plastic in it

  • @dmac1465
    @dmac1465 Před 4 lety

    Well done sir

  • @guilldea
    @guilldea Před 4 lety

    God damn I wasnt ready for that start

  • @bklanyon176
    @bklanyon176 Před 4 lety

    What a fantastic channel

  • @faraizawaira
    @faraizawaira Před 4 lety

    This channel is awesome

  • @OmkarBhatkar
    @OmkarBhatkar Před 4 lety

    I loved the "Results please..it never leaves the lab" caption in corner.. hahah.. Rice univ researchers just used the age old flash reduction with joule heating to get graphene.. although mass prod may be a long way yet with this method..

  • @SombreroLAW
    @SombreroLAW Před 4 lety +1

    Petition to rename subject zero to just graphene things
    Sick content by the way keep going my guy

  • @simonbreidert5683
    @simonbreidert5683 Před 4 lety

    Thanks

  • @christopherconner6151
    @christopherconner6151 Před 3 lety

    Rice and beans are so good. Lol. Good job on your videos. I wish my wife and 3 year old granddaughter would actually listen with me.

  • @dogsbestfriends
    @dogsbestfriends Před 3 lety

    love this

  • @VictorSadkov
    @VictorSadkov Před 4 lety +2

    Congratulations with the first sponsored video!!!

  • @justinw1765
    @justinw1765 Před 3 lety

    I'm wondering if one uses a 1250 watt microwave, combined with a super insulated microwave kiln, if you can get a similar effect--though it would take longer? Basically the trick here seems to be heating to a very high temp with a no or super low oxygen atmosphere (i.e. "inert").
    The great thing about microwaves is that if you already have a carbon, the carbon itself directly heats up being a microwave susceptor. To get it very, very hot, you just need the most powerful microwave you can get, along with a very insulated microwave kiln. To create an inert atmosphere is pretty easy. You just put layers of paper (I also use at least one parchment paper layer), then covered with something like baking soda or some sacrificial carbon. The kiln itself will already be somewhat protected by outside, fresh air by being covered and the heating process expanding the air out.

  • @ibrahimdemir3422
    @ibrahimdemir3422 Před 3 lety

    It is very intelligent idea in theory. Providing materials that will work at those temperatures and pressures in the industrial scale is a big problem. I hope they are manufactured and available.

  • @cylian8422
    @cylian8422 Před 4 lety +4

    I was waiting for this film for a looong time

  • @MrUmbraya
    @MrUmbraya Před 3 lety +3

    Could you have a liquid carbon source flow into the chamber for flash graphene?
    If so you could let multiplex the inlet with two solutions: carbon rich and chamber purge. The second fluid could wash the chamber after the reaction and push the graphene further down the process line. Right?
    Or is liquid carbon suspension a bad idea for some reason I can't think of?

    • @rahulbindhu
      @rahulbindhu Před 2 lety

      Maybe H2 generation from the liquid pose a threat

  • @jmd1743
    @jmd1743 Před 3 lety +2

    Turns our dumps into gold mines.

  • @kanvarlalk3960
    @kanvarlalk3960 Před 4 lety

    superb.

  • @samuelatancha4591
    @samuelatancha4591 Před 4 lety +2

    What if we use capacitors to get high volts and amps 🤔 ?

  • @lamalien2276
    @lamalien2276 Před 3 lety

    You should rename you channel "practical environmentalism", love it!

  • @yudhobaskoro8033
    @yudhobaskoro8033 Před 3 lety

    How can i get the beautiful soundtrack of this channel, like for real its soothing and futuristic at the same time

  • @timothygooding9544
    @timothygooding9544 Před 4 lety

    I don't understand how disconnected graphine flakes help improve materials other than possible increase conductivity.
    I thought the strength from graphine was from being perfectly binded in a sheet.
    Any help?

  • @manavkukreja5023
    @manavkukreja5023 Před 3 lety

    Can you also please make a video on PHA from food waste, industrial technology

  • @LooseGripHandle
    @LooseGripHandle Před 4 lety +4

    I produced this experiment once at home. I was young and messing around with high voltage. I had some wires to hookup to a little light bulb and thought that 9v battery just wasn't enough.
    So i plugged it straight into the mains of the house 240v. And Boom, a very white flash and tripped fuses... Little did i know i had basically created graphene within the light bulb.
    I was 9 Years old.

  • @jesusm1583
    @jesusm1583 Před 4 lety

    Why would be required to be a quartz Cristal? Any other material able of withstand those temperature would work even we lose the transparency?

  • @pobembe1958
    @pobembe1958 Před 4 lety

    This process is so Fantastic, so Easy, so Cheap......So, How Come NOBODY is doing it already?

  • @loungelizard836
    @loungelizard836 Před 4 lety +1

    Incineration is better than recycling currently. It's clean and is used to generate electricity.

  • @ltsky311
    @ltsky311 Před rokem

    The Rice method uses a vacuum chamber, which you disqualified in your opening statement.

  • @artemisbsyt105
    @artemisbsyt105 Před 3 lety

    Graphene literally is the best,wonder material ever, it solves almost all problems. Graphene has infinite uses.

  • @trishhart8766
    @trishhart8766 Před 4 lety +38

    Nice. But please tell me those are used coffee grounds. We need to save the planet but not at the expense of coffee! lol

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 Před 4 lety

      @Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath And?

    • @pixelmaster98
      @pixelmaster98 Před 4 lety

      @Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath well, you can probably also make graphene from cocaine, but that's a little bit too expensive, I think.

    • @PaulA-on2ct
      @PaulA-on2ct Před 4 lety +1

      Hi, the coffee grounds were collected from the Rice coffee shop on our campus AFTER they had been used! Don’t worry, they were used to make delicious coffee before the staff gave them to us!

    • @demoniack81
      @demoniack81 Před 4 lety

      @Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath lmaoing at your life.

    • @RealPackCat
      @RealPackCat Před 3 lety

      Coffee - the new ethanol like corn. Coffee is already too expensive and so is corn.

  • @jogmas12
    @jogmas12 Před 4 lety

    Made money on my graphene stock this week. May be a speculative industry for some time though.

  • @St0RM33
    @St0RM33 Před 4 lety +1

    6:58 Preassure lol

  • @PutitinDaramen
    @PutitinDaramen Před 2 lety

    my love for beans is immense.

  • @ChristopherSchreib-yn1vu
    @ChristopherSchreib-yn1vu Před 5 měsíci

    What if they retrofitted a very powerful electrical ‘grounding’ wired to the metal surfaces the Graphene deposits upon, by hot wiring it to a nearby electric power plant generator, while emitting electricity at the trash materials to be converted into Graphene via stepped-up microwave pulses, to ‘Brute Force’ the instantaneous Graphene layer formation?

  • @KurdtMk2
    @KurdtMk2 Před 4 lety

    So, let me get this straight - we're having plastic waste problem because we make a lot of it, most of it decomposes very slowly, and most of it is uneconomical to recycle. And there's a chance we'll be able to turn it into graphene. Which might eventually replace some/most plastic. So, thinking a little ahead, if it becomes true at some point ... won't we have the same problem with graphene waste? How long does it decompose / how easy (cheap) is it to recycle...?

  • @TheEpicRandomGuy
    @TheEpicRandomGuy Před 4 lety +1

    At 7:19 when you said “in theory” it set off siri on my phone.

  • @raymondsims537
    @raymondsims537 Před 4 lety

    Do a vid on the other methods

  • @Dc_tech386
    @Dc_tech386 Před 2 lety

    What the voltage rate use to break the carbon down

  • @n1mbusmusic606
    @n1mbusmusic606 Před 4 lety

    Can you make graphene aerogels with this process? Cause then we could make oneill cylinders

  • @frimodig
    @frimodig Před 3 lety

    Which companies using the flash graphene method?

  • @frozen_byte
    @frozen_byte Před 3 lety +1

    - Introducing Flash
    - No, not the one from DC though
    - oh! You mean the one from AC?

  • @lamebubblesflysohigh
    @lamebubblesflysohigh Před 4 lety +1

    what to do with all that graphene when we are over it with something better?

  • @DJHLX3
    @DJHLX3 Před 4 lety

    So if u get hit by lightning does some carbon in your body turn to graphene

  • @Vivaswaan.
    @Vivaswaan. Před 4 lety

    A very comprehensive analysis. I learnt a lot, understood a lot. Felt like all the aspects of topic were covered.
    Where else could I find so many things consolidated in one video!! Thanks Subject Zero. Grateful.

  • @geoffreykail9129
    @geoffreykail9129 Před 4 lety +2

    How do they separate the graphine from the rest of the waste?

    • @noalear
      @noalear Před 3 lety

      Probably burn it off and/or chemically dissolve everything else.

  • @michelbisson6645
    @michelbisson6645 Před 3 lety

    I do diesel and syngas with non recycled plastic now.hard to get through all the red tape, graphene is interesting but c60 very interesting to.a 6 millions$ plants when all regulation is filed plant cost 30 millions...very hard..

  • @novantha1
    @novantha1 Před 3 lety

    3:48
    Is that an increase in compressive strength or torsive strength...?

  • @nosegrindv4951
    @nosegrindv4951 Před 3 lety

    The handiwork of Beloved James Tour and his collegues!

  • @SickPrid3
    @SickPrid3 Před 4 lety +5

    yeah, yeah. We know, the almighty graphene is* coming to commercial manufacturing
    *is never

    • @Vit-Pokorny
      @Vit-Pokorny Před 3 lety

      just like Geometry Dash 2.2 update

  • @tedbear631
    @tedbear631 Před 4 lety

    Amazing

  • @cautiousoptimist
    @cautiousoptimist Před 3 lety

    Workin on it... ;-)

  • @SD-tj5dh
    @SD-tj5dh Před 4 lety +1

    If we could put all our plastic into space and encouraged it all to gravitate together.. could we make a new moon? Maybe a satellite of waste plastic that can attract other space junk?
    Roll with me here. I think I'm onto something.

  • @SirChickon
    @SirChickon Před 4 lety

    this reminds me of the time they wanted (and did) to add aspestos to everything

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 Před 4 lety +3

      Asbestos really was an amazing material, we just didn't know enough to work with it safely back then.

  • @fatah496
    @fatah496 Před 4 lety +3

    4 am in the morning, yeah one more video before sleep

  • @witherock2886
    @witherock2886 Před 4 lety

    what are the waste products ? is there no pressure increase in the quartz tube ?

    • @SubjectZeroScience
      @SubjectZeroScience  Před 4 lety +1

      Apparently, not enough to cause any damage to it and all waste products are just gases from other elements.

  • @mikemcmullen5006
    @mikemcmullen5006 Před 3 lety

    Doesn't boron also form a similiar material? Borophene or something

  • @abdelrahmanmohammed9405
    @abdelrahmanmohammed9405 Před 4 lety +1

    Time to mass produce graphene superconductors

  • @no_mnom
    @no_mnom Před 4 lety +3

    Typo at 3:26 anyone?

  • @manavkukreja5023
    @manavkukreja5023 Před 3 lety

    Very good explanation, no where else seen. Excellent work 🔥 🔥
    But No vaccum? Are you sure?

  • @coraku0047
    @coraku0047 Před 4 lety

    So in what Form is the Graphene in? Are there Graphene flakes in the plastic that is used or how can you imagine the Graphene that is produced
    Sry for bad English grammar

    • @michaelleue7594
      @michaelleue7594 Před 4 lety

      The idea is that at 2000 degrees all the bonds in the original material are broken. So there should be no plastic contaminant by the end of the process. They basically achieve that temperature by electrocuting small quantities at a time; the thing that's exciting is that it's fast and doesn't require chemical preparation, and the carbon in the material forms up naturally into small flakes of graphene. The company that holds the patent is selling the flakes suspended in bottles of water, I think.

  • @gareth5000
    @gareth5000 Před 4 lety

    I thought of a good way to get rid of all rubbish, pour molten iron onto it to make steel and alloys!

  • @DuaneLeise
    @DuaneLeise Před 3 lety

    There are bi-products that are also produced in the flash graphene process. What are they? Are they usable? Are they harmful or harmless? Can they be managed in an ecologically responsible way?

  • @NeoShameMan
    @NeoShameMan Před 4 lety +2

    What is the material of the electrode though, we still need to resist temperature, can we replace the quartz by something else?

  • @ME-wy1io
    @ME-wy1io Před 2 lety

    If we make too much graphene, would it become another environmental problem like plastic? As far as my understanding this new element would be almost non destructive and might cause bigger problem then plastic.

  • @sdgreen4580
    @sdgreen4580 Před 4 lety +1

    Too good to be true. We'll end up trading plastic for graphene pollution that is 1000 times stronger.

    • @mikloscsuvar6097
      @mikloscsuvar6097 Před 2 lety

      The situation is not hopeless. Our victator Viktor Orban get Budapest's biggest football stadium rebuilt. The present 60% of the building's concrete mass is made of the old concrete. It just must be prescribed not to dump waste concrete.

  • @botondklinger2152
    @botondklinger2152 Před 4 lety +1

    i watched like 3 flash graphene vids just today and he makes one too, yeeee boiii

  • @michelbisson6645
    @michelbisson6645 Před 3 lety

    what type of graphene?

  • @rezokobaidze8501
    @rezokobaidze8501 Před 4 lety

    graphene is one atome thick material. In video you are talking about bulk material that is called graphene oxide.

  • @ronhuff9219
    @ronhuff9219 Před 4 lety

    Will using mass quantities of Graphene cause new and complex pollution and recycling challenges for future generations too?

  • @SuMiTKuMaR4113
    @SuMiTKuMaR4113 Před 4 lety

    Perfeto

  • @Fil_2k
    @Fil_2k Před 4 lety

    I also love rice and bean