The National Physical Laboratory's (NPL) Quantum Detection Group has just published research investigating the hydrophobicity of epitaxial graphene, which could be used in the future to better tailor graphene coatings to applications in medicine, electronics and more. Contrary to widely-held beliefs, the findings indicate that graphene's hydrophobicity is strongly thickness-dependent, with single-layer graphene being significantly more hydrophilic than its thicker counterparts.

Graphene is a two-dimensional crystal of carbon, with many potential applications such as flexible electronics, efficient transistors and novel sensors. To encourage the uptake of graphene for electrical applications, the challenges of large-scale production and control of its properties under a variety of environmental conditions need to be addressed.

Many graphene-based devices will have to operate in ambient conditions where humidity is non-zero and not monitored. Air humidity can affect graphene's performance through changes in its mechanical and electrical properties - it is therefore critically important to obtain knowledge of graphene's water affinity.

The new study, conducted in collaboration with the Naval Research Laboratory, addresses the much-debated question of whether graphene is hydrophobic or hydrophilic. The common assumption is that graphene, as with many other carbon-based materials, is hydrophobic. This work, published in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano ("Thickness-Dependent Hydrophobicity of Epitaxial Graphene"), has proved the question to be much more complicated than first thought.

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