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Graphene‐based technologies for tackling COVID‐19 and future pandemics

Graphene‐based technologies for tackling COVID‐19 and future pandemics
Graphene‐based technologies for tackling COVID‐19 and future pandemics
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the need for rapid tools and technologies to combat highly infectious viruses. The excellent electrical, mechanical and other functional properties of graphene and graphene-like 2D materials (2DM) can be utilized to develop novel and innovative devices to tackle COVID-19 and future pandemics. Here, the authors outline how graphene and other 2DM-based technologies can be used for the detection, protection, and continuous monitoring of infectious diseases including COVID-19. The authors highlight the potential of 2DM-based biosensors in rapid testing and tracing of viruses to enable isolation of infected patients, and stop the spread of viruses. The possibilities of graphene-based wearable devices are discussed for continuous monitoring of COVID-19 symptoms. The authors also provide an overview of the personal protective equipment, and potential filtration mechanisms to separate, destroy or degrade highly infectious viruses, and the potential of graphene and other 2DM to increase their efficiency, and enhance functional and mechanical properties. Graphene and other 2DM could not only play a vital role for tackling the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic but also provide technology platforms and tools for the protection, detection and monitoring of future viral diseases.
1616-301X
Afroj, Shaila
9b4a7a26-01db-40c7-a933-f07a7ed58a73
Britnell, Liam
f4386940-56bf-400c-8ff0-0078d0fc4ca3
Hasan, Tahmid
5c5b3476-d038-4434-b8e0-a03570e966ef
Andreeva, Daria V.
51945a31-cd9d-4fe4-8b08-9035bbcebafa
Novoselov, Kostya S.
2f354e1c-f0b0-4070-ba89-cee99c49bc10
Karim, Nazmul
31555bd6-2dc7-4359-b717-3b2fe223df36
Afroj, Shaila
9b4a7a26-01db-40c7-a933-f07a7ed58a73
Britnell, Liam
f4386940-56bf-400c-8ff0-0078d0fc4ca3
Hasan, Tahmid
5c5b3476-d038-4434-b8e0-a03570e966ef
Andreeva, Daria V.
51945a31-cd9d-4fe4-8b08-9035bbcebafa
Novoselov, Kostya S.
2f354e1c-f0b0-4070-ba89-cee99c49bc10
Karim, Nazmul
31555bd6-2dc7-4359-b717-3b2fe223df36

Afroj, Shaila, Britnell, Liam, Hasan, Tahmid, Andreeva, Daria V., Novoselov, Kostya S. and Karim, Nazmul (2021) Graphene‐based technologies for tackling COVID‐19 and future pandemics. Advanced Functional Materials, 31 (2). (doi:10.1002/adfm.202107407).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the need for rapid tools and technologies to combat highly infectious viruses. The excellent electrical, mechanical and other functional properties of graphene and graphene-like 2D materials (2DM) can be utilized to develop novel and innovative devices to tackle COVID-19 and future pandemics. Here, the authors outline how graphene and other 2DM-based technologies can be used for the detection, protection, and continuous monitoring of infectious diseases including COVID-19. The authors highlight the potential of 2DM-based biosensors in rapid testing and tracing of viruses to enable isolation of infected patients, and stop the spread of viruses. The possibilities of graphene-based wearable devices are discussed for continuous monitoring of COVID-19 symptoms. The authors also provide an overview of the personal protective equipment, and potential filtration mechanisms to separate, destroy or degrade highly infectious viruses, and the potential of graphene and other 2DM to increase their efficiency, and enhance functional and mechanical properties. Graphene and other 2DM could not only play a vital role for tackling the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic but also provide technology platforms and tools for the protection, detection and monitoring of future viral diseases.

Text
Adv Funct Materials - 2021 - Afroj - Graphene‐Based Technologies for Tackling COVID‐19 and Future Pandemics - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 16 September 2016
Published date: 22 December 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496021
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496021
ISSN: 1616-301X
PURE UUID: ec3f59c8-e224-44e7-8689-4a5f7445fc0c
ORCID for Nazmul Karim: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4426-8995

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 29 Nov 2024 16:09
Last modified: 30 Nov 2024 03:17

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Contributors

Author: Shaila Afroj
Author: Liam Britnell
Author: Tahmid Hasan
Author: Daria V. Andreeva
Author: Kostya S. Novoselov
Author: Nazmul Karim ORCID iD

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