'Lab to fab' Are promises graphene revolution coming true? of a
The Guardian Weekly
|October 24, 2025
It was hailed as a wonder material that would change the world - but developing a substance that is just one atom thick has proved slow work
After graphene was first produced at the University of Manchester in 2004, it was hailed as a wonder material, stronger than steel but lighter than paper. But two decades on, not every UK graphene company has made the most of that potential. Some show promise but others are struggling.
Extracted from graphite, commonly used in pencils, graphene is a latticed sheet of carbon one atom thick, and is highly effective at conducting heat and electricity. China is the world's biggest producer, using it to try to get ahead in the global race to produce microchips and in sectors such as construction.
In the UK, a graphene-enhanced, low-carbon concrete was laid at a Northumbrian Water site in July, developed by the Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre (GEIC) at the University of Manchester and Cemex UK.
Jensen also invented Vantablack coatings, made of carbon nanotubes - rolled-up sheets of graphene - and known as the world's "blackest black" because it absorbs 99.96% of light, at the UK company Surrey NanoSystems he founded in 2007.
"This is the challenge when you have new materials trying to displace an incumbent technology," Jensen said. "The value proposition must be extremely good, but there also must be a way to manufacture the material and manufacture it at scale for the application... then you have to meet price expectations because there's no point in delivering something that's costing 10 times more than the incumbent."
Germany's Bayer tried to produce carbon nanotube products in bulk but shut down its pilot factory more than a decade ago after the expected surge in demand failed to materialise. The material is now mainly used as a filler to strengthen plastic products. The company described the potential applications of nanotubes as "fragmented".
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