Call for Abstract

4th World Congress and Expo on Graphene & 2D Materials, will be organized around the theme “A new spin on Nanotechnology and Redefining the Boundaries”

Graphene World 2019 is comprised of 18 tracks and 96 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in Graphene World 2019.

Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.

Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.

\r\n Flawless graphene and synthetically changed graphenes (CMGs, e.g., graphene oxide, lessened graphene oxide and their subsidiaries) can respond with an assortment of compound substances. These responses have been connected to regulate the structures and properties of graphene materials, and to broaden their capacities and reasonable applications. This viewpoint traces the science of graphene, including functionalization, doping, photochemistry, synergist science, and supramolecular science. The components of graphene related responses will be presented, and the difficulties in controlling the substance responses of graphene will be talked about.

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\r\n As a rising class of new materials, two-dimensional (2D) non-graphene materials, including layered and non-layered, and their heterostructures are as of now pulling in expanding enthusiasm because of their promising applications in gadgets, optoelectronics and clean vitality. Rather than conventional semiconductors, for example, Si, Ge and III-V gather materials, 2D materials demonstrate huge benefits of ultrathin thickness, high surface-to-volume proportion, and high similarity with adaptable gadgets. Inferable from these extraordinary properties, while downsizing to ultrathin thickness, gadgets in view of these materials and in addition falsely engineered heterostructures show novel and shocking capacities and exhibitions.

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  • Track 2-1Synthesis of Patterned Graphene films on thin nickel layers
  • Track 2-2Characterisation of Single-layer Graphene
  • Track 2-3Surface chemistry on graphene and 2D materials
  • Track 2-4Graphene and graphene- related and 2D materials in composite forms
  • Track 2-5Spectroscopy and microscopy of graphene and 2D materials
  • Track 2-6Meterology of graphene and 2D materials
  • Track 2-7Biological and toxicity aspects of graphene ,graphene oxide and 2D Materials
  • Track 2-8Graphene and 2D material sensors
  • Track 2-9Graphene-related biomedical and environment research
  • Track 2-10Graphene: Innovation and commercialization.

\r\n Graphene is one of a few types of carbon known as its "allotropes". Allotropes are fundamentally unique types of a similar component, in which similar particles security together in various ways. For instance, particles of oxygen can tie together as two iotas – O2, which makes up a fifth of Earth's air – or as three molecules, ozone, which shields us from bright radiation.  On account of carbon, beside ash and charcoal, the most usually known structures are jewel, graphite, and the fullerenes. In precious stones, the iotas are masterminded in a pyramid molded cross section.

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\r\n Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and graphene are two of the most concentrated on materials today. Two-dimensional graphene has extraordinarily pulled in a considerable measure of consideration in light of its one of a kind electrical properties, for example, high bearer versatility , the quantum Lobby impact at room temperature , and ambipolar electric field impact alongside ballistic conduction of charge bearers .Some different properties of graphene that are similarly intriguing incorporate its suddenly high retention of white light, high flexibility , uncommon attractive properties, high surface region, gas adsorption, and accuse exchange collaborations of atoms.

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  • Track 5-1New 3D printed graphene supercapacitors
  • Track 5-2New Graphene-based supercapacitor can store as much energy as a NiMH battery
  • Track 5-3Graphene-based supercapacitor declared to someday replace Lithium-ion batteries
  • Track 5-4 Combining graphene with manganese oxide to create innovative supercapacitors
  • Track 5-5Graphene supercapacitors could be printed onto a DVD
  • Track 6-1Revolutionary graphene polymer batteries for electric cars
  • Track 6-2Graphenano announces the launch of a manufacturing plant for graphene-based batteries
  • Track 6-3Graphene enables long lasting lithium-air batteries
  • Track 6-4Solarthermal Energy
  • Track 6-5Increasing the efficiency of energy production
  • Track 6-6Nuclear Acident Cleanup and Waste Storage
  • Track 6-7Hydrogen Technologies
  • Track 6-8Sustainable Technologies
  • Track 6-9Electrical energy storage
  • Track 6-10Graphene features as a transparent electrode.
  • Track 6-11Generation of chemical energy resources.
  • Track 7-1Graphene based products
  • Track 7-22D Materials heterostructures and superstructures
  • Track 7-3Controlled functionalisation of graphene oxide through surface modification
  • Track 7-4Chemical functionalisation of Graphene
  • Track 7-5Field emission from Graphene
  • Track 7-6Graphene based nanofluids and nano lubricants
  • Track 8-1Integration of Graphene with other 2D materials
  • Track 8-2Integration of Graphene with other 2D materials
  • Track 8-3Growth, synthesis techniques and integration methods
  • Track 8-4Chemistry and modification of 2DMaterials
  • Track 8-5Electronic, optoelectronic properties and potential applications
  • Track 8-6Structural, electronic, optical and magnetic properties of 2DMaterials and devices
  • Track 8-7Applications of 2DMaterials in electronics, photonics, energy and biomedicine

\r\n Graphite, Graphene, and Their Polymer Nanocomposites presents an assemblage of developing exploration inclines in graphene-based polymer nanocomposites (GPNC). Universal scientists from a few controls share their skill about graphene, its properties, and the conduct of graphene-based composites.

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  • Track 11-1Rubber Composites
  • Track 11-2Solar Cells
  • Track 11-3Catalyst
  • Track 11-4Key Fabrication Equipment
  • Track 11-5Desalination
  • Track 11-6Lubrication Materials
  • Track 11-7Application of Graphene Film
  • Track 11-8Anti-corrosion Coatings
  • Track 11-9Metal Composites
  • Track 11-10Fuel Cells
  • Track 11-11Sensors
  • Track 11-12Building Materials
  • Track 12-1Synthesis, characterization, properties, and applications
  • Track 12-2Growth of large area Graphene
  • Track 12-3Physics and chemistry of Graphene
  • Track 12-4Graphene for plasmonics and optics
  • Track 12-5Reduction of Graphene oxide
  • Track 12-6Graphene based nanoelectronic devices
  • Track 12-7Graphene and Graphene oxide for energy (battery, capacitor, catalysis, solar)
  • Track 13-1Pharmaceutical drug discovery and production
  • Track 13-2Advent of personalized medicine
  • Track 13-3Nano Bio-drug discovery
  • Track 13-4Nano Biosensors, bioelectronics & biomechatronics
  • Track 14-1Graphene Materials
  • Track 14-2Biomolecular Materials
  • Track 14-3Biophysics and Biotechnology
  • Track 14-4Graphene Bioplastics
  • Track 14-5Drug Delivery System
  • Track 14-6Vaccines
  • Track 14-7Biocomposites
  • Track 14-8Biodegradable biomaterials
  • Track 15-1Nano Biosensors, bioelectronics & biomechatronics.
  • Track 15-2Graphene Composites
  • Track 15-3Chemisry of 2-D Materials
  • Track 15-4Carbon nano-tubes in cold atomic gases
  • Track 15-5Characterisation and modelling of Graphene materials in Composites
  • Track 15-6Fundamental Science of Graphene and 2D Materials beyond graphene
  • Track 15-7Science and applications of graphene and new 2D materials
  • Track 15-8Correlation Effects in Graphene and 2D Materials
  • Track 16-1Latest developments in graphene production methods towards wide scale commercialization
  • Track 16-2Emerging opportunities for graphene-based materials
  • Track 16-3Nano Fibre Compared With Human Hair
  • Track 16-4Nanowires as Hair spray
  • Track 16-5Remote sensing through nano Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and satellites
  • Track 16-6Development of intelligent wearable systems using nano technology
  • Track 16-7Nano Produces Self-replicating microscopic robots
  • Track 16-8Nanosensors to replace RFID chips on consumer Products
  • Track 16-9Bubble pen to write with nano particles
  • Track 16-10A molecular light-driven nanosubmarine
  • Track 16-11Nanopores could take the salt out of seawater
  • Track 16-12A Nanowrench in the works
  • Track 16-13Nanotechnology changes behaviour of Materials used in solar -cells
  • Track 17-1Precise biosensing through graphene-quenched fluorescence
  • Track 17-2Graphene-enhanced cell differentiation and growth
  • Track 17-3Graphene-assisted laser desorption/ionization for mass spectrometry
  • Track 17-4Chemical and biological graphene sensors
  • Track 17-5Biological interactions of graphene-family nanomaterials

\r\n One of a kind among the components, carbon can cling to itself to shape to a great degree solid two-dimensional sheets. Since we live in a three-dimensional world, these sheets can be rolled and collapsed into a various scope of three-dimensional structures, of which the most well  known are the ball-formed fullerenes and the tube shaped nanotubes. Different shapes are additionally conceivable, for example, carbon nanocones and Swiss cheddar like nanoporous carbon. A prologue to the geometry and energetics of carbon nanostructures is likewise accessible.

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