Physics in Canada / La Physique au Canada - 2010 (66.4)

Graphene, Nobel Prize and All that Jazz

Author(s)
Tapash Chakraborty
Institution
University of Manitoba

The study of Graphene, a single atomic layer of graphite first isolated in 2004 [1], has made possible a quantum leap in the exploration of the physics of two-dimensional electron systems [2,3]. Since the initial report of its discovery, many thousands of papers have been published (Fig. 1), attempting to explain every aspect of the exotic electronic properties of this system. This “graphene euphoria” culminated with the 2010 Nobel Prize in physics being awarded jointly to Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov of the University of Manchester, UK, “for groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material graphene”.  But what are the properties of graphene, and how was it made?  Why it is so exciting for so many researchers, and why the Nobel Prize?