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Graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms in a honeycomb lattice, offers a number of fundamentally superior qualities that make it a promising material for a wide range of applications, particularly in electronic devices. Its unique form factor and exceptional physical properties have the potential to enable an entirely new generation of technologies beyond the limits of conventional materials. The extraordinarily high carrier mobility and saturation velocity can enable a fast switching speed for radio‐frequency analog circuits. Unadulterated graphene is a semi‐metal, incapable of a true off‐state, which typically precludes its applications in digital logic electronics without bandgap engineering. The versatility of graphene‐based devices goes beyond conventional transistor circuits and includes flexible and transparent electronics, optoelectronics, sensors, electromechanical systems, and energy technologies. Many challenges remain before this relatively new material becomes commercially viable, but laboratory prototypes have already shown the numerous advantages and novel functionality that graphene provides.
Graphene offers a number of fundamentally superior qualities that make it a promising material for a wide range of applications, particularly in electronic devices. The versatility of graphene‐based devices includes high‐speed transistors, transparent and flexible electronics, displays, optoelectronics, sensors, nanoelectromechanical systems, and energy technologies. Many challenges remain before this relatively new material becomes commercially viable, but laboratory prototypes have already demonstrated the numerous advantages and novel functionality that graphene provides.