A European project will sometimes succeed at not only meeting its defined objectives, but also exceeding them. HIGRAPHINK is one of these. Its groundbreaking, highly conductive graphene ink is likely to trend in applications ranging from optoelectronics through to composites, batteries and flexible OLED devices.
Originally, the roadmap of HIGRAPHINK (Highly Conductive Graphene Ink) consisted in demonstrating the viability of graphene as an additive for organic semiconducting materials, to drive proof-of-concept Organic light emitting diode (OLED) displays. But the project was so successful at creating graphene with previously unthinkable properties that its host, the University of Cambridge, decided to stick to readying it for commercialisation.
Further information: Novel graphene ink stretches the limits of product development