Researchers call this new type of material a 'corralled supercooled liquid'. Atoms in a liquid are normally like people in a busy crowd, constantly jostling and pushing past one another. However, scientists have now found a way to freeze some of these atoms in place, creating an immobile 'corral' that keeps the mobile liquid atoms trapped inside. Once the liquid is trapped inside a ring, its behaviour becomes different to any known form of matter.
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. The material when it came out of academia was hyped to death but the challenge is going from lab to fab, says Ben Jensen, the chief executive of 2D Photonics, a startup spun out from the University of Cambridge that makes graphene-based photonic technology for datacentres.