Mad Props to Issac Arthur for giving credit to the first to theorize the existence of Graphene (Phillip Wallace), and to the other pioneers who followed. Also, who downvoted this video and what's wrong with you?
@@rojaws1183 This video could lead to building the first continent-sized paperclip, yet the paperclip maximizer downvotes it? Smh, it needs to self-debug
I down voted because a narrator should not have a speech impediment. Get mad all you want, but you wouldn't hire a person with Parkinson's to sign greeting cards.
I know right!? That is one of the huge things that I love about this channel it is designed with a layman like myself in mind. I feel super smart after watching each of these videos! Lol.
@@pedrofortunas Humans aren't evolving. We are deteriorating with each generation. Mutations are slowly destroying our genetic viability. About 100 deleterious mutations are passed on and added upon each generation. We are hopelessly doomed. Don't trust me by any means, but if you wish to understand what I mean, read the population genetics science being pooblished.
@@Jamie-Russell-CME can you give us a timeframe for that? Because genetically modified humans already exist, and the shark didn't exactly devolve in it's majority of time fauna existed so I think we're kind of outpacing nature by a few million years in that regard.
sounds like the issue still revolves around being able to mass produce both graphene and diamene in high quantity cheaply. Once somebody comes up with a process to bulk generate pristine sheets of them the new industrial revolution is on.
Not to be mention they will be rich beyond imagination even just on a small percent of royalties, this is the kind of technology that becomes a new landmark age. I for one look forward to the "Graphene Age"
Just like with transistors. Once they could be produced in high quality with great quantities (means, more transistors on a wafer), it was possible to produce consumer electronics cheap. The first calculators did cost a few thousand dollars, today we have million times the computing power in a smartphone for 100 bucks.
Yh flash graphene was demonstrated in January and tons of companies have already licensed the tech from Rice University. I think we may have solved it finally.
I generally only do skippable intro ones after the videos been out a month or two and the sponsor bit at the end, except on some of the ultra-long ones, mostly though because I dislike being interrupted mid-video :)
@@isaacarthurSFIA The most obnoxious aspect of TH-cam ads is when they interrupt a video mid-sentence or even mid-word. It's seriously jarring. I prefer it when channels like Cool Worlds divide their videos into chapters. That's the perfect place for an ad.
I consider myself lucky that I have actually seen an early piece of graphine a old friend of mine was working at the Manchester university institute of technology (umist) on graphine and she was getting married. A colleague of hers made a titanium wedding ring for her with a 2mm diameter graphine sheet suspended between a sapphire window from a laser and a platinum mirror at the back. I asked her when we would be able to build gas turbine fans using it and she said 'soon" . 10 years later i am told that's still an expensive piece if it was perfect.
@@Betrix5060 just look around for ring smiths. I had an organic themed puzzle ring made, where the 3 rings for marriage link together like a puzzle to form different things, starts as just a vine for the engagement, becomes a blooming rose with white diamond when you add the wedding band, and the final ring when it's added will make it look like a series of roses along the finger to represent how a single blossom turns into several, a metaphor to how a single couple can create a family. The whole ring fits between the knuckle and first finger joint. Now the hard part will be finding someone to give it to
I remember reading a while ago about how some scientists managed to correct defects in graphene by blasting it with microwaves for a few seconds (of course it's a bit more complicated than that). But this approach means your production process doesn't need to be perfect if the refinement process is cheap and simple.
Been watching your content for a real long time now, and wanted to tell you how much I think your speech has improved. You've done some of the best work on the net explaining the bridge between science and science fiction. i think your helping a new generation of people explore what is possible
What do you think about the use of space salvaging or "shipbreaking" such as that seen with real cargo ships? Will such operations be automated or not?
I suspect that almost all work in space will be automated in the future just as it already is now. Also the space robot union don't want no competition from the fleshbags.
@@rojaws1183 Maybe, but remember the light lag issue. Of course, most things can be automated, but if you don't have AI, you'll probably need some people overseeing the army of bots where quick response is needed.
I have to say that your speech impediment is so relaxing. The way you carry your voice. Everything. Your channel has become my all time favorite, Beating out VSauce for me. I have friends with speech impediments and they often express that it makes them sometimes feel uncomfortable. That when people speak positively about it encourages them. That’s why I felt the need to mention it. It’s stolen my attention in a good way. Thanks for doing what you do. At dinner time my wife and I play your videos for our 6 kids. It’s become our thing now. Ty ty.
if other companies want to make graphene they are forced to make a new process. without patents there is less of a reason to invent. but what if the government refunded and rewarded them with tax dollars for inventing new things instead?
@@johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559 As opposed to funding them with government grants and then letting them patent the results. Maybe that's not a thing in the field of material science, but I know it's a thing for pharmaceuticals.
You explain things so well, I’m interested in science, but I don’t have a lot of background in it, so I appreciate detailed explanations that aren’t hard to understand.
Fantastic episode. I really appreciate the level of detail witch is complex enough but not too complex. Also I the fact that you also look into the short term future as well as long term.
I've recently worked a little bit with graphene oxide. In combination with cobalt salts and some organic dye and suspended in water it can absorbe light and use that energy to slowly break water into hydrogen and oxygen, basicly making fuel from water and sunlight without need to turn sunlight into electricity first
"how to avoid distractions" Video suddenly features attractive young women at computers, reminding male viewers why they need to manage their distraction. Sneaky.
Graphene will stay forver 5 years into the future until you someday decide to investigate why the batery of your cellphone last soo long and discover that graphene base products have been around for years by that point
This was a great episode, Isaac. You mentioned it would be more technical than usual and were worried it would be flat. Don't sweat it! This was one of my favourites of the last few years.
Lots of potential with Graphene and other Ene materials. Even more than I imagined previously. Yet another informative episode as always Isaac and team.
Isaac I rarely comment but. Your speech has improved so much over the time on this channel even if you still had i heavy impediment it would not matter your content is extremely informative and interesting. Please keep up the good work and I wish you nothing but the best in the years to come 😊
That graphene-superconductor 3D-printing thing is similar to what I started writing my bachelor thesis about. Or tried writing, we didn't get very far as our dualbeam electron microscope broke. There was a weird theory floating about the room that it may require some special physics in order to transport a different kind of Cooper pair, so lots of things still very unknown. This stuff is really complicated as it turns out...
Little bit of serendipity: my physics Ph.D. qualifying oral exam, which is in just under 2 weeks, is on graphene (superconductivity in "magic-angle" twisted bilayers, mentioned @ 8:45). Thanks for making this video just for me, Isaac ;)
Gardener ships and space colonies are my favorite subjects on this awesome channel. Life in a space colony episode 3 is still my favorite episode. Can't wait until next week!
@@Ottee2 Isaac is VERY entretaining and keeps you concentrated (even to someone with ADHD like me) but the tone and cadence of his voice is also soothing. I will admit, I sometimes put videos I've already seen of his, in the reproduction, and use it to facilitate sleep.
I might be a bit late to the party but I just want to thank Isaac for the insane amount of research that goes into every single video. I am a researcher at a German University in the field of Nanoscience, working with monolayer materials like Graphene, MoS2, WSe2 and others. This video is extremely accurate when it comes to the science behind mono materials and also the technical difficulties. Unfortunately for us in the european science community Graphene has turned out a bit of a disappointment but that might change in a few years again. Nethertheless this video gave me a great idea for an experiment I want to conduct in the next months, thank you Isaac!
This probably won't be a cost-effective application any time soon, but I wonder if graphene could be substituted for plastic to produce incredibly resilient but chemically inert, nonleaching storage containers, bottles, and so on.
To be honest that never even corssed my mind but actually does seem a plausible distant but not-too-distant application if we get bulk production going, as a layer of liner
15:30: Ah yes, corporate ownership of critical technology-the specter over all modern research. What lovely proof of the intersection between politics and science (or at least economic systems and technological development), and how it can sour if handled poorly.
@Tristan M My apologies if I misrepresent your argument; it's hard to parse. Especially the part where little Force-generating things publish papers. * I don't understand how you can say that patents _aren't_ a monopoly. That is literally their purpose-they give the patent-holder the exclusive right to use or license whatever the patent is for. That is a monopoly. * Governments do have a monopoly of force, yes. I don't see how that's relevant to my statement, especially since I never said that a government holding the exclusive rights to use/license/etc graphene tech would be a good thing. * Ideally, graphene-related technology would be in the public domain, like e.g. paper-making and the printing press are. I understand the logic behind intellectual property rights, but that doesn't mean I have to like the effects it can have when corporations hold the rights to their employees' inventions. Especially when, as is often the case, the research was funded by government grants. * I'm not sure if I should criticize you for your regurgitated anti-intellectualist rhetoric or your poor grasp of grammatical conventions, like capitalization and sentence structure. But I suppose those two go hand in hand. English teachers are probably in on the conspiracy.
Recently I read about an artist who had gained the exclusive rights to a certain type of super black type of material for art purposes, preventing anyone else from using it. I think that's similar to what you're talking about here, if significantly less impractical for everyone else.
Fusion Scientist? Are you working with any of the Fusion research projects, and can you talk generally about what you do? I'm a mere enthusiast but love to learn about the various ideas folks are working on to bring Fusion into use
@@UNSCPILOT I work at MIT on the SPARC project; we're doing the more established pathway (tokamaks), as high-temperature superconductors have enabled higher magnetic fields, and therefore better confinement. Graphene would enable us to essentially make machines of the same power, but much (much!) smaller, which is a huge driver of costs. Though at that point problems tend to revolve around getting the heat out of the reactor, but it's wonderful that the limit isn't on the physics end anymore. Specifically I work with plasma physics models; writing fast codes to simulate the particles.
@@anthonycavallaro9941 out of interest, what's your view on Magnetised Target Fusion as a solution, for example General Fusions approach. As merely a layman, it does seem to have me the most excited. Be good to know if it's unfounded.
@@anthonycavallaro9941 Have you heard of (or even used =D) GS2, written by Bill Dorland? From what I remember it uses the gyrokinetic model - I actually used it for my plasma physics masters project back in 2011 to verify something to do with ion transport wave across plasma....I forget the specifics now :(....haven't touched physics since then as you can probably tell (sad times). Anyhow, do you use gyrokinetic models at all in your line of simulation? Are they still a big(ish) thing? And how much would the arrival of cheap graphene expedite the onset of commercial fusion?
4 ปีที่แล้ว +20
When you told that graphene can cut thru cells, I realized how sharp it has to be XD but then again, i once got cut by paper or a blade of grass, so yeah, very think materials can be very sharp.
Hey Isaac, I love your content. You essentially say, more in depth and more sophisticated, what I often end up pondering about in one way or another. I have a question though, due to our technology progressing as it currently is, monitor panel technology to be more specific, would it for you be doable to make all the amazing space animations in HDR? More and more people have one or more of such monitors nowadays and I feel HDR animations, especially space ones where most of the screen is dark and some of it is bright, would add to the overall view experience expanding on the top notch narrated content.
Super za HDR ideju...al like jer si iz Hrv...ne pratim nogomet..i iz zgb sam..al prepoznah znak :D Super da i ljudi kod nas prate ovak super channel... xD
While the use of phosphorus was a good choice due to the allotrope analogy, phosphorus is in the nitrogen column. It also has 3 electron holes generally available for covalent bonding. The tetrahedral allotrope demonstrates this by how each atom is bound to three others. It's not my intention to be pedantic, but the statement about the bonding sites was in error. Carbon's next twin chemically would actually be silicon. This columnar period behavior on the table shows why lead is so bad: being in the same column, it occasionally replaces carbon atoms in organic molecules, making removal of lead problematic for organisms. In practice, yes, phosphorus can also donate 5 electrons, but that's a rarer configuration, and if I recall correctly that's more common in ionic bonding.
I don't know if I am truly at ease with someone making use of "columnar" in a sentence to illuminate a concept, but I am grateful I am not the single person who immediately froze, backed up the playback, and panicked a slight bit that such an awesome mistake snuck by. I almost counted the tetrahedral bonds like someone who didn't study Orgo. Thanks for saying something here--nicely, to boot.
Here's a good topic for you Issac, the transitional period of a scarcity society to a post scarcity society and the turbulent changes on society, economy, and individual priorities.
Awesome Video Sir! As Stringer mentions below, I can't wait until we commercialize graphene! I believe it will totally change life as we know it! Thanks Isaac!
I always make sure that I have showered and made my tea before I see the episode. I want to make sure that I get the best experience possible. I think we here on TH-cam put too much weight and importance on getting to a video first.
I can't even use scotch tape without messing it all up, and these guys win a Nobel Prize with it! Bravo! Great video! Recently, I was I was thinking, "what happened to all the hype about graphene?" A few years ago, it seemed like everyone was talking about it changing the world, but I haven't heard much about it lately. Isaac to the rescue!
But like, most galaxies are receding from us. Dyson sphere, and then what? We're trapped. I'm a little bit pessimistic about the apparent dynamics of this universe we're living in.
My personal Holy Grail, one I have neither the training nor the mindset to accomplish, is figuring out a way to mine and process graphene from the atmosphere. This is one of the few building materials that could be mined and processed from low-earth orbit.
Hello Arthur, Water the lovely simple molecule is as important to life as anything. I’ve seen some research on graphene as a filter for water purification and desalination. Fresh pure water on the cheap as graphene becomes commercially available. Desert blooming and no water shortage in a near term possibility is an amazing prospect. Pollutants sequestered away in contaminated areas also isn’t a bad thing. More than faster electronic devices, at least in the near term, that water treatment may be the most beneficial aspect of graphene to humanity.
Seems to me we are at the same point with Graphene that we were with iron 2500 years ago. The only difference is we now have the technology to speed up our use of new materials not to mention dedicated research through material science's. So it may only take us 150 years to realize and adapt all of Graphenes special properties. This is still a long time on a personal level but is very fast on a societal level. your great grand children will see the start of a new world equal to one that our great grandparents watched with the dawn of flight.
It makes me really want to know what is the thinnest graphene sheet that could be used to effectively act as a conductor for electrons going between Points A and B. If it's incredibly difficult to produce entire "sheets", would it then be easier to make something smaller, or in this case "thinner"? What materials bond well enough with graphene to act as insulators (like how rubber is used to surround copper, for wiring).
The "magic angle" between sheets of graphene yields interesting properties. Reminds me of Lovecraft's story about the witch's house, where the walls and corners were at weird angles and geometry that enabled a portal into hell to be opened.
I wish you would do more of these technical episodes! I still remember how you did lots of calculations during the upward bound series and I honestly miss that level of detail. So if you read this: I love to get more tech and less philosophy. :-)
One quick note on hydrogen embrittlement and how graphene can prevent it. Hydrogen embrittlement is one of the main problems the space shuttle hydrogen tank had (the big orange tank) and why we're tending toward methane as a primary rocket fuel instead of hydrogen even though hydrogen gets you higher isp. If you had a hydrogen tank, but lined on the inside with graphene, it would negate that problem entirely, possibly reopening the door for hydrogen as a primary rocket fuel.
apparently researchers have found a way to actually generate a usable current with graphene from the thermal motion of atoms, aka Brownian motion. something previously thought impossible. graphene just keeps getting better.
1000 years from now, historians will look back at this platform and declare, "Isaac Arthur's leading scientific hypotheses....and funny cat videos. Those were the only important source materials of that era that could be found."
NGL Isaac that's one of the worst mispronunciations of my last name I've heard. I'm impressed lol. In all seriousness working on this episode with you all was awesome. I need to get back into our brainstorming and editing sessions soon. Once my job lets up a bit.
I don't give a crap whether he has a lisp or not he is one of the most brilliant speculators IV heard yet he excites my sense of wonder it's a pleasure to listen to him
Titanic ships/structures next episode - Beware the space icebergs! Continue the good work, isaac! Been watching for nearly a year now, and im enjoying your views and your proposed "fictional as of now" exploration/colony videos. Out of curiosity, have you written any novels? If not, you really should. Id buy a copy.
I made traces of graphene once just take a pencil and rub the pencil point on a paper like ur coloring it and then take Scotch tape and put it on the paper and rip the sucker off,the tape with the tiny amount of graphene was able to withstand more stretching than normal but it’s not anything SUPER strong
I think the most interesting bit of technology that will come out of this is ballistics technology - how projectiles interact with armor and flesh. Well, to me, but I also love learning about ballistics. There will come a day wherein out modern weapons will largely be useless against infantry and especially hard targets. What will we do then? If one sheet acts like ceramic and shatters, it could be incredibly useful for dispersing the impact after contact with a first layer of graphene. You could also alternate layers between graphene and ballistic fabrics like Kevlar. As is, our body armor comes in two types, hard and soft. Soft body armor is ballistic fabric and thats it. It will stop most low velocity and large caliber rounds, such as a 9x19/9x18mm or .45acp, which are common pistol caliber cartridges. It will, however, hurt because theres nothing to disperse the impact. The other alternative fabric+steel and fabric+ceramic, which form hard armors. These are heavy and uncomfortable, but can stop armor penetrating pistol caliber rounds and most ball rifle ammo, which is what most ammo is. Ceramic is lighter, but can only take a few hits before being compromised. Steel is heavier, but take a lot more abuse before being compromised. With graphene, this trade off needn't exist. You can have graphene, plates between layers of kevlar to act as ceramic, or have the double layered, kevlar, then single layered, kevlar, repeat. This could, in theory, make impenetrable armor by most standards. What will we see then? More focus on high explosives? Using energy weapons somehow? This is a problem shotguns faced when body armor came around, how will firearms adapt to this? Will we even see small arms? Are cannons the way of the future? Could be interesting, because there likely will be a war in the future for us, one fought off-world most likely.
I actually did my MChem at manchester a couple of years ago, working on water based reduced graphene oxide suspensions for stuff like circuit or membrane printing. The introduction to my final project involved going through the properties and history of the material, and what themes look promising and what the current challenges are, really exciting and hopeful stuff, but yeh the biggest issue at the mo is cost effective mass production, and reproducibility between labs (the ever present concern in academia)
Thanks for the recommendation but I'm very confident in how I approach life and how I manage my time. Okay an Isaac Arthur video messes me up from time to time.
Very interesting video, I have been reading a lot of sci-fi novels who is all talking about graphene and the applications for a space society. Really awesome to hear some real facts about this particular subject.
17:44 - That being said, you might want to consider changing things up and doing a special video all about those different approaches as well as studying and research tips. Could be kinda interesting.
Patents are great for securing potential wealth, but seem to do so at the expense of humanity for the benefit of a few. Perhaps if we didn't have patents, or if patents promised far smaller royalty fees, we would advance much faster as a society, rather than waiting out two decades for the patents to expire before finally using them.
The pen is mightier than the sword.
Graphite pencil: Hold my beer.
It's a single-atom-thick sheet of perfectly-arranged beer, or "beerene."
Depend on how big the sword is and if that person knows how to use it
@@altha-rf1et dat reach though
@@altha-rf1et And also, if the sword has a throwable pommel. (For any Skallagrim fans who might be here :) )
:O
Mad Props to Issac Arthur for giving credit to the first to theorize the existence of Graphene (Phillip Wallace), and to the other pioneers who followed. Also, who downvoted this video and what's wrong with you?
Probably a bot tbh
I suspect there is some bot downvoting new videos. But it could also be the paperclip maximizer. Always suspect the paperclip maximizer.
@@rojaws1183 This video could lead to building the first continent-sized paperclip, yet the paperclip maximizer downvotes it? Smh, it needs to self-debug
@@rojaws1183 As a Zebra, I object to Paperclip Maximizers as I can't use even a single paperclip.
I down voted because a narrator should not have a speech impediment. Get mad all you want, but you wouldn't hire a person with Parkinson's to sign greeting cards.
incredible science and potential applications liket this is what makes me hopefull and look forwards to the future.
I know right!? That is one of the huge things that I love about this channel it is designed with a layman like myself in mind. I feel super smart after watching each of these videos! Lol.
We were born at the perfect time to see humanity evolve beyond our imagination!
climate change is accelerating at an incredible rate.
the future is not promised.
@@pedrofortunas
Humans aren't evolving. We are deteriorating with each generation. Mutations are slowly destroying our genetic viability. About 100 deleterious mutations are passed on and added upon each generation. We are hopelessly doomed.
Don't trust me by any means, but if you wish to understand what I mean, read the population genetics science being pooblished.
@@Jamie-Russell-CME can you give us a timeframe for that? Because genetically modified humans already exist, and the shark didn't exactly devolve in it's majority of time fauna existed so I think we're kind of outpacing nature by a few million years in that regard.
sounds like the issue still revolves around being able to mass produce both graphene and diamene in high quantity cheaply.
Once somebody comes up with a process to bulk generate pristine sheets of them the new industrial revolution is on.
Not to be mention they will be rich beyond imagination even just on a small percent of royalties, this is the kind of technology that becomes a new landmark age.
I for one look forward to the "Graphene Age"
There has been a recent revolution in manufacturing posibilities. Look up flash graphene
Just like with transistors. Once they could be produced in high quality with great quantities (means, more transistors on a wafer), it was possible to produce consumer electronics cheap. The first calculators did cost a few thousand dollars, today we have million times the computing power in a smartphone for 100 bucks.
That's always the hard part of a new technology, the innovation.
Yh flash graphene was demonstrated in January and tons of companies have already licensed the tech from Rice University. I think we may have solved it finally.
"This episode is probably more technical than our usual content..."
[HYPE INTENSIFIES]
Your profile pic is perfect for this comment.
Also I *agree*
Lesbiologist
Started lickin' my chops for _that_ one, admittedly
When I was a child, my grandmother often said a pristine pencil can change the world.
no, any old cheap pencil can.
She meant it in other way lol
I love the fact that there are no ad interruptions!
Probably an accident honestly
I generally only do skippable intro ones after the videos been out a month or two and the sponsor bit at the end, except on some of the ultra-long ones, mostly though because I dislike being interrupted mid-video :)
Indeed, no ad is still a plus.
Isaac Arthur very good! :)
@@isaacarthurSFIA The most obnoxious aspect of TH-cam ads is when they interrupt a video mid-sentence or even mid-word. It's seriously jarring. I prefer it when channels like Cool Worlds divide their videos into chapters. That's the perfect place for an ad.
Puns in the first minute of the video? Alright, you get your thumbs up, oh wait! This is an isaac video, i thumbed up the before hitting play...
"This episode is probably a bit more technical than our usual content..."
Now I'm even more excited!!
I consider myself lucky that I have actually seen an early piece of graphine a old friend of mine was working at the Manchester university institute of technology (umist) on graphine and she was getting married. A colleague of hers made a titanium wedding ring for her with a 2mm diameter graphine sheet suspended between a sapphire window from a laser and a platinum mirror at the back. I asked her when we would be able to build gas turbine fans using it and she said 'soon" . 10 years later i am told that's still an expensive piece if it was perfect.
How romantic. All I had to offer was a plain old boring gold ring.
@@rojaws1183 titanium with a 2mm diameter graphine sheet suspended between a sapphire window is much better
Can you ask your friend where one might get a ring like that made? Because holy shit, that is the coolest ring I've heard of in my freaking life.
@@Betrix5060 just look around for ring smiths. I had an organic themed puzzle ring made, where the 3 rings for marriage link together like a puzzle to form different things, starts as just a vine for the engagement, becomes a blooming rose with white diamond when you add the wedding band, and the final ring when it's added will make it look like a series of roses along the finger to represent how a single blossom turns into several, a metaphor to how a single couple can create a family. The whole ring fits between the knuckle and first finger joint.
Now the hard part will be finding someone to give it to
Ro Jaws I guess by your name your a fan of my old friend Pat Mills?
I remember reading a while ago about how some scientists managed to correct defects in graphene by blasting it with microwaves for a few seconds (of course it's a bit more complicated than that). But this approach means your production process doesn't need to be perfect if the refinement process is cheap and simple.
Ugh, I always wish your episodes were longer. I want episodes that require multiples snacks and multiples drinks
"Dad, what are you building?"
"Nanomachines, son."
Been watching your content for a real long time now, and wanted to tell you how much I think your speech has improved. You've done some of the best work on the net explaining the bridge between science and science fiction. i think your helping a new generation of people explore what is possible
remember hearing about this stuff back in the 90's when i was in the military
What do you think about the use of space salvaging or "shipbreaking" such as that seen with real cargo ships? Will such operations be automated or not?
A game is being made that is about shipbreaking. hardspace shipbreaker
I suspect that almost all work in space will be automated in the future just as it already is now. Also the space robot union don't want no competition from the fleshbags.
@@maxmcdonald7798 early access is out and it's really good
@@rojaws1183 - Nah, there will be work via remote control/operation too. Very little actual hands on though.
@@rojaws1183 Maybe, but remember the light lag issue. Of course, most things can be automated, but if you don't have AI, you'll probably need some people overseeing the army of bots where quick response is needed.
I have to say that your speech impediment is so relaxing. The way you carry your voice. Everything. Your channel has become my all time favorite, Beating out VSauce for me. I have friends with speech impediments and they often express that it makes them sometimes feel uncomfortable. That when people speak positively about it encourages them. That’s why I felt the need to mention it. It’s stolen my attention in a good way. Thanks for doing what you do. At dinner time my wife and I play your videos for our 6 kids. It’s become our thing now. Ty ty.
I love you man, I love this channel and everything it stands for. I hope content like this reaches a more mainstream audience in the future
Finally, someone mentioned hydrogen embrittlement
sounds sexy.
Hydrogenated Vegetables
TL;DW: Graphene is awesome, but we will have to wait until patents expire
@Tristan M pretty sure they can only patent manufacturing processes not the material itself
@@GoldenMinotaur - That's true. You can't patent nature.
if other companies want to make graphene they are forced to make a new process. without patents there is less of a reason to invent.
but what if the government refunded and rewarded them with tax dollars for inventing new things instead?
@@johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559 As opposed to funding them with government grants and then letting them patent the results.
Maybe that's not a thing in the field of material science, but I know it's a thing for pharmaceuticals.
China: what's a patent and WTF do I care?
You explain things so well, I’m interested in science, but I don’t have a lot of background in it, so I appreciate detailed explanations that aren’t hard to understand.
Astronomer: Graphene asteroid isn't real, it can't impact you
Graphene asteroid: Here I aaam!
*cuts you in half*
What if its so thin you still just stick together
@@melvinklark4088 nothing is that thin. If that did happen it would be from quantum tunneling not how thin it is.
Anyone notice that he didn't talk about the large machines to scale up Flash Graphene, or even Flash Graphene, at all in this video?
3:16 *SCP Foundation has entered the chat.*
Fantastic episode. I really appreciate the level of detail witch is complex enough but not too complex. Also I the fact that you also look into the short term future as well as long term.
I've recently worked a little bit with graphene oxide.
In combination with cobalt salts and some organic dye and suspended in water it can absorbe light and use that energy to slowly break water into hydrogen and oxygen, basicly making fuel from water and sunlight without need to turn sunlight into electricity first
Wow, that's cool. Is there any chance that I could get the paper or some other sources to read from your work, sir?
nicely done, man. The wobbly hex animation was fun too.
Gotta love this guy! Great content with great communication skills 😀
"how to avoid distractions" Video suddenly features attractive young women at computers, reminding male viewers why they need to manage their distraction. Sneaky.
:)
@@isaacarthurSFIA Heart their comment or I'll hug you (hugs are scary now).
Meanwhile facilitating the distraction themselves
The laser dot on the coal clip was more distracting...
Another great video, thanks Isaac.
Sounds like another wonderful lifesaving product that won't actually be ready til after im dead...
Its only 30 years away .
Graphene will stay forver 5 years into the future until you someday decide to investigate why the batery of your cellphone last soo long and discover that graphene base products have been around for years by that point
This was a great episode, Isaac. You mentioned it would be more technical than usual and were worried it would be flat. Don't sweat it! This was one of my favourites of the last few years.
One day these videos will be nothing but referencing previous videos :D
Lots of potential with Graphene and other Ene materials. Even more than I imagined previously.
Yet another informative episode as always Isaac and team.
Isaac I rarely comment but. Your speech has improved so much over the time on this channel even if you still had i heavy impediment it would not matter your content is extremely informative and interesting. Please keep up the good work and I wish you nothing but the best in the years to come 😊
That graphene-superconductor 3D-printing thing is similar to what I started writing my bachelor thesis about. Or tried writing, we didn't get very far as our dualbeam electron microscope broke.
There was a weird theory floating about the room that it may require some special physics in order to transport a different kind of Cooper pair, so lots of things still very unknown. This stuff is really complicated as it turns out...
Little bit of serendipity: my physics Ph.D. qualifying oral exam, which is in just under 2 weeks, is on graphene (superconductivity in "magic-angle" twisted bilayers, mentioned @ 8:45). Thanks for making this video just for me, Isaac ;)
Gardener ships and space colonies are my favorite subjects on this awesome channel. Life in a space colony episode 3 is still my favorite episode. Can't wait until next week!
Love the special on graphene! Would be interested in more videos on developments in tech that are required for the future technologies you talk about.
This video on a two-dimensional structure deserves... flattery.
Ouch
ba-dummm tssssss...
OK, I'll see myself out.
Any one else when they can't sleep just put on an episode of Issac arthur and then just be out in 10 minutes?
Is it the tone of his voice, the music, or both?
@@Ottee2 Isaac is VERY entretaining and keeps you concentrated (even to someone with ADHD like me) but the tone and cadence of his voice is also soothing. I will admit, I sometimes put videos I've already seen of his, in the reproduction, and use it to facilitate sleep.
I dont know if that is a compliment or an insult.
I might be a bit late to the party but I just want to thank Isaac for the insane amount of research that goes into every single video. I am a researcher at a German University in the field of Nanoscience, working with monolayer materials like Graphene, MoS2, WSe2 and others. This video is extremely accurate when it comes to the science behind mono materials and also the technical difficulties. Unfortunately for us in the european science community Graphene has turned out a bit of a disappointment but that might change in a few years again.
Nethertheless this video gave me a great idea for an experiment I want to conduct in the next months, thank you Isaac!
Another great video, always love the content
Where/when did Tesla say their batteries were using graphene?
Time to learn. Thank you sir.
Thanks Issac
Thank God for your Content it’s so interesting
2D > 3D
I was not expecting weeb memes in the comment section of SFIA
3DPD
Is that a boobs joke?
@@lordilluminati5836
Especially from someone with "Lolita" in her name.
@@jbtechcon7434 It's a hentai joke.
In the distant future there will be diamene trash bags that won't tear even when filled with the shards of broken beer bottles.
This probably won't be a cost-effective application any time soon, but I wonder if graphene could be substituted for plastic to produce incredibly resilient but chemically inert, nonleaching storage containers, bottles, and so on.
To be honest that never even corssed my mind but actually does seem a plausible distant but not-too-distant application if we get bulk production going, as a layer of liner
15:30: Ah yes, corporate ownership of critical technology-the specter over all modern research. What lovely proof of the intersection between politics and science (or at least economic systems and technological development), and how it can sour if handled poorly.
@Tristan M My apologies if I misrepresent your argument; it's hard to parse. Especially the part where little Force-generating things publish papers.
* I don't understand how you can say that patents _aren't_ a monopoly. That is literally their purpose-they give the patent-holder the exclusive right to use or license whatever the patent is for. That is a monopoly.
* Governments do have a monopoly of force, yes. I don't see how that's relevant to my statement, especially since I never said that a government holding the exclusive rights to use/license/etc graphene tech would be a good thing.
* Ideally, graphene-related technology would be in the public domain, like e.g. paper-making and the printing press are. I understand the logic behind intellectual property rights, but that doesn't mean I have to like the effects it can have when corporations hold the rights to their employees' inventions. Especially when, as is often the case, the research was funded by government grants.
* I'm not sure if I should criticize you for your regurgitated anti-intellectualist rhetoric or your poor grasp of grammatical conventions, like capitalization and sentence structure. But I suppose those two go hand in hand. English teachers are probably in on the conspiracy.
Recently I read about an artist who had gained the exclusive rights to a certain type of super black type of material for art purposes, preventing anyone else from using it. I think that's similar to what you're talking about here, if significantly less impractical for everyone else.
Loved this one! Definitely do another episode like this !
Finally, I've been waiting for this since I saw the comment asking you to do it
As a fusion scientist, I salivate at the things we could do with graphene!!
Fusion Scientist? Are you working with any of the Fusion research projects, and can you talk generally about what you do?
I'm a mere enthusiast but love to learn about the various ideas folks are working on to bring Fusion into use
@@UNSCPILOT I work at MIT on the SPARC project; we're doing the more established pathway (tokamaks), as high-temperature superconductors have enabled higher magnetic fields, and therefore better confinement. Graphene would enable us to essentially make machines of the same power, but much (much!) smaller, which is a huge driver of costs. Though at that point problems tend to revolve around getting the heat out of the reactor, but it's wonderful that the limit isn't on the physics end anymore.
Specifically I work with plasma physics models; writing fast codes to simulate the particles.
@@anthonycavallaro9941 out of interest, what's your view on Magnetised Target Fusion as a solution, for example General Fusions approach. As merely a layman, it does seem to have me the most excited. Be good to know if it's unfounded.
@@anthonycavallaro9941 Have you heard of (or even used =D) GS2, written by Bill Dorland? From what I remember it uses the gyrokinetic model - I actually used it for my plasma physics masters project back in 2011 to verify something to do with ion transport wave across plasma....I forget the specifics now :(....haven't touched physics since then as you can probably tell (sad times).
Anyhow, do you use gyrokinetic models at all in your line of simulation? Are they still a big(ish) thing?
And how much would the arrival of cheap graphene expedite the onset of commercial fusion?
When you told that graphene can cut thru cells, I realized how sharp it has to be XD but then again, i once got cut by paper or a blade of grass, so yeah, very think materials can be very sharp.
I mean it's basically diamond paper
Hey Isaac, I love your content. You essentially say, more in depth and more sophisticated, what I often end up pondering about in one way or another. I have a question though, due to our technology progressing as it currently is, monitor panel technology to be more specific, would it for you be doable to make all the amazing space animations in HDR? More and more people have one or more of such monitors nowadays and I feel HDR animations, especially space ones where most of the screen is dark and some of it is bright, would add to the overall view experience expanding on the top notch narrated content.
Super za HDR ideju...al like jer si iz Hrv...ne pratim nogomet..i iz zgb sam..al prepoznah znak :D
Super da i ljudi kod nas prate ovak super channel... xD
While the use of phosphorus was a good choice due to the allotrope analogy, phosphorus is in the nitrogen column. It also has 3 electron holes generally available for covalent bonding. The tetrahedral allotrope demonstrates this by how each atom is bound to three others. It's not my intention to be pedantic, but the statement about the bonding sites was in error. Carbon's next twin chemically would actually be silicon.
This columnar period behavior on the table shows why lead is so bad: being in the same column, it occasionally replaces carbon atoms in organic molecules, making removal of lead problematic for organisms.
In practice, yes, phosphorus can also donate 5 electrons, but that's a rarer configuration, and if I recall correctly that's more common in ionic bonding.
I don't know if I am truly at ease with someone making use of "columnar" in a sentence to illuminate a concept, but I am grateful I am not the single person who immediately froze, backed up the playback, and panicked a slight bit that such an awesome mistake snuck by. I almost counted the tetrahedral bonds like someone who didn't study Orgo. Thanks for saying something here--nicely, to boot.
Great job as always!
Great video! Thanks for your work.
Here's a good topic for you Issac, the transitional period of a scarcity society to a post scarcity society and the turbulent changes on society, economy, and individual priorities.
Already watched this when it came out, but I find it funny this popped up in my feed again after all the new news about graphene recently.
Awesome Video Sir! As Stringer mentions below, I can't wait until we commercialize graphene! I believe it will totally change life as we know it! Thanks Isaac!
Posted 8mins ago.....you better believe I'm waking up and eating my breakfast to this!
:P You better believe I don't go to bed before I watched this
I always make sure that I have showered and made my tea before I see the episode. I want to make sure that I get the best experience possible. I think we here on TH-cam put too much weight and importance on getting to a video first.
I can't even use scotch tape without messing it all up, and these guys win a Nobel Prize with it! Bravo! Great video! Recently, I was I was thinking, "what happened to all the hype about graphene?" A few years ago, it seemed like everyone was talking about it changing the world, but I haven't heard much about it lately. Isaac to the rescue!
I often forget to like your videos because they are so professional I forget that I am watching on youtube.
"Titanic structures... the size of a continent"? What happened to your sense of scale?
I know, I was thinking 2-3 billion times that size from Isaac :)
It's a matter of time frame. Gotta do continents before you can do Dyson spheres.
But like, most galaxies are receding from us. Dyson sphere, and then what? We're trapped. I'm a little bit pessimistic about the apparent dynamics of this universe we're living in.
@@polychoron Well, then we seal the solar system in a Dyson Shell with a hole at one point, and now the solar system is a spaceship.
Next episode. Small structures, galactic dyson spheres.
My personal Holy Grail, one I have neither the training nor the mindset to accomplish, is figuring out a way to mine and process graphene from the atmosphere. This is one of the few building materials that could be mined and processed from low-earth orbit.
Really enjoyed this episode. So much of what you share is 'massive' scale, it's really neat go to the nanoscale in materials science.
Hello Arthur, Water the lovely simple molecule is as important to life as anything. I’ve seen some research on graphene as a filter for water purification and desalination. Fresh pure water on the cheap as graphene becomes commercially available. Desert blooming and no water shortage in a near term possibility is an amazing prospect. Pollutants sequestered away in contaminated areas also isn’t a bad thing. More than faster electronic devices, at least in the near term, that water treatment may be the most beneficial aspect of graphene to humanity.
Seems to me we are at the same point with Graphene that we were with iron 2500 years ago. The only difference is we now have the technology to speed up our use of new materials not to mention dedicated research through material science's. So it may only take us 150 years to realize and adapt all of Graphenes special properties. This is still a long time on a personal level but is very fast on a societal level. your great grand children will see the start of a new world equal to one that our great grandparents watched with the dawn of flight.
It makes me really want to know what is the thinnest graphene sheet that could be used to effectively act as a conductor for electrons going between Points A and B. If it's incredibly difficult to produce entire "sheets", would it then be easier to make something smaller, or in this case "thinner"? What materials bond well enough with graphene to act as insulators (like how rubber is used to surround copper, for wiring).
Very nice and I especially liked the shorter episode. Tightens up your presentation.
I wonder what impact a space elevator would have on the ozone layer? Would it tear it up like a rocket, or leave it preserved?
This is still one of the best Graphene videos on youtube.
Cowbin is essential for life... And also for corralling cows.
The "magic angle" between sheets of graphene yields interesting properties. Reminds me of Lovecraft's story about the witch's house, where the walls and corners were at weird angles and geometry that enabled a portal into hell to be opened.
I wish you would do more of these technical episodes! I still remember how you did lots of calculations during the upward bound series and I honestly miss that level of detail. So if you read this: I love to get more tech and less philosophy. :-)
I put this episode off. As usual you exceeded expectations. Much obliged Isaac.
(8:40 - 9:16)
When a grid's misaligned
with another behind
That's a moiré...
When the spacing is tight
And the difference is slight
That's a moiré
Ah....xkcd.....
Tokisaki Kurumi but I bet if we throw in the word quantum this basically describes why it works.
One quick note on hydrogen embrittlement and how graphene can prevent it. Hydrogen embrittlement is one of the main problems the space shuttle hydrogen tank had (the big orange tank) and why we're tending toward methane as a primary rocket fuel instead of hydrogen even though hydrogen gets you higher isp. If you had a hydrogen tank, but lined on the inside with graphene, it would negate that problem entirely, possibly reopening the door for hydrogen as a primary rocket fuel.
apparently researchers have found a way to actually generate a usable current with graphene from the thermal motion of atoms, aka Brownian motion. something previously thought impossible. graphene just keeps getting better.
1000 years from now, historians will look back at this platform and declare, "Isaac Arthur's leading scientific hypotheses....and funny cat videos. Those were the only important source materials of that era that could be found."
NGL Isaac that's one of the worst mispronunciations of my last name I've heard. I'm impressed lol.
In all seriousness working on this episode with you all was awesome. I need to get back into our brainstorming and editing sessions soon. Once my job lets up a bit.
I don't give a crap whether he has a lisp or not he is one of the most brilliant speculators IV heard yet he excites my sense of wonder it's a pleasure to listen to him
Titanic ships/structures next episode - Beware the space icebergs!
Continue the good work, isaac! Been watching for nearly a year now, and im enjoying your views and your proposed "fictional as of now" exploration/colony videos.
Out of curiosity, have you written any novels? If not, you really should. Id buy a copy.
I made traces of graphene once just take a pencil and rub the pencil point on a paper like ur coloring it and then take Scotch tape and put it on the paper and rip the sucker off,the tape with the tiny amount of graphene was able to withstand more stretching than normal but it’s not anything SUPER strong
Amazing video fam!
"Let's dismantle the solar system!"
That exclamation mark just does it for me :D The devil is always in the details.
I think the most interesting bit of technology that will come out of this is ballistics technology - how projectiles interact with armor and flesh. Well, to me, but I also love learning about ballistics.
There will come a day wherein out modern weapons will largely be useless against infantry and especially hard targets. What will we do then? If one sheet acts like ceramic and shatters, it could be incredibly useful for dispersing the impact after contact with a first layer of graphene. You could also alternate layers between graphene and ballistic fabrics like Kevlar. As is, our body armor comes in two types, hard and soft. Soft body armor is ballistic fabric and thats it. It will stop most low velocity and large caliber rounds, such as a 9x19/9x18mm or .45acp, which are common pistol caliber cartridges. It will, however, hurt because theres nothing to disperse the impact. The other alternative fabric+steel and fabric+ceramic, which form hard armors. These are heavy and uncomfortable, but can stop armor penetrating pistol caliber rounds and most ball rifle ammo, which is what most ammo is. Ceramic is lighter, but can only take a few hits before being compromised. Steel is heavier, but take a lot more abuse before being compromised.
With graphene, this trade off needn't exist. You can have graphene, plates between layers of kevlar to act as ceramic, or have the double layered, kevlar, then single layered, kevlar, repeat. This could, in theory, make impenetrable armor by most standards. What will we see then? More focus on high explosives? Using energy weapons somehow? This is a problem shotguns faced when body armor came around, how will firearms adapt to this? Will we even see small arms? Are cannons the way of the future?
Could be interesting, because there likely will be a war in the future for us, one fought off-world most likely.
I actually did my MChem at manchester a couple of years ago, working on water based reduced graphene oxide suspensions for stuff like circuit or membrane printing. The introduction to my final project involved going through the properties and history of the material, and what themes look promising and what the current challenges are, really exciting and hopeful stuff, but yeh the biggest issue at the mo is cost effective mass production, and reproducibility between labs (the ever present concern in academia)
Nanoprinting, fusion and asteroid mining would be our ticket out of the climate spiral. Great subject again
Thanks for the recommendation but I'm very confident in how I approach life and how I manage my time. Okay an Isaac Arthur video messes me up from time to time.
Very interesting video, I have been reading a lot of sci-fi novels who is all talking about graphene and the applications for a space society. Really awesome to hear some real facts about this particular subject.
What’s your opinion on turbostratic graphene? It’s sometimes known as flash graphene. Do you think it has a future?
Very interesting, thank you!
17:44 - That being said, you might want to consider changing things up and doing a special video all about those different approaches as well as studying and research tips. Could be kinda interesting.
If it would just be "kinda interesting," why would he waste his time doing it?
I'm excited for the future
Great video !
Scotch tape! Now we're talking real science ! ;)
Patents are great for securing potential wealth, but seem to do so at the expense of humanity for the benefit of a few. Perhaps if we didn't have patents, or if patents promised far smaller royalty fees, we would advance much faster as a society, rather than waiting out two decades for the patents to expire before finally using them.
NOTHER GEM ISAAC
Another awesome video