A Nobel Laureate who co-created graphene has made another discovery that could turbocharge numerous futuristic applications, from smart contact lenses to rapid disease detection. Konstantin Novoselov, who won the 2010 Nobel Prize for Physics, is among a group of scientists behind the breakthrough. The team announced today that they’ve unearthed unique properties in two unusual compounds: rhenium diselenide and rhenium disulfide — aka ReSe2 and ReS2. The duo comes from the same family of 2D structures as graphene: the thinnest, strongest, and most thermally conductive material known to exist. ReSe2 and ReS2 also have special attributes. Both of them can create a…
This story continues at The Next Web
Originally appeared here:
Nobel winner behind graphene hails new ‘wonder materials’ for smart contact lenses