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Topic: Scientists have turned cooking oil into a material 200 times stronger than steel (Read 355 times)

legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1011
FUD Philanthropist™
Hmm you can put things in there ? Who knew ?
be right back i have some ideas  Grin

Ok.. i am back for a second.. i have a question.. is it still edible ?
Imagine making CPU's with Graphene then if you get hungry you got a god damn snack  Shocked

ahh science your doin' it again.. just when my interest meter was goin' limp you brought me around hard again  Grin

Get it ? Hard ? Graphene ?

FUCK ! am i funny !  Grin  Grin  Grin  Cool  Shocked
vip
Activity: 1428
Merit: 1145
well fuck me, i be trippin' balls i dunno about you man !

Come on Science when do they make a pill to make your dick bigger ?

..bitches be slackin'  Angry

Do what I do. I stick a pill up my dick to make it twice as big (depending on the size of the pill, this is).
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1011
FUD Philanthropist™
well fuck me, i be trippin' balls i dunno about you man !

Come on Science when do they make a pill to make your dick bigger ?

..bitches be slackin'  Angry
legendary
Activity: 3766
Merit: 1368
Scientists have turned cooking oil into a material 200 times stronger than steel





Researchers have found a way to turn cheap, everyday cooking oil into the wonder material graphene - a technique that could greatly reduce the cost of making the much-touted nanomaterial.

Graphene is a single sheet of carbon atoms with incredible properties - it's 200 times stronger than steel, harder than diamond, and incredibly flexible. Under certain conditions, it can even be turned into a superconductor that carries electricity with zero resistance.

That means the material has the potential to make better electronics, more effective solar cells, and could even be used in medicine.

Last year, a study suggested that graphene could help mobile phone batteries last 25 percent longer, and the material has the potential to filter fuel out of thin air.


Read more at http://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-have-turned-cheap-cooking-oil-into-a-material-200-times-stronger-than-steel.


Cool
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