Graphene Uses

Graphene Uses

Graphene is the strongest material in the world and have many super features in ( Electronics , Power , Nanotechnology , Mechanics , Safety ..... and more ) so it enter in a lot of fields and everyday Graphene uses grow for give manufacturing material more strong and great feature ... we are interesting in all Graphene uses and news .


Graphene device assists in cancer treatments

 

Graphene device helps to monitor the progress of an advanced cancer treatment

Graphene device helps to monitor the progress of an advanced cancer treatment

A new Graphene device developed by American researchers at the University of Michigan could provide a non-invasive way to monitor the progress of an advanced cancer treatment this device depend on graphene oxide-based device that could provide a non-invasive way to monitor the progress of an advanced cancer treatment. The device is able to capture cancer cells out of a blood sample and let them go later, enabling further tests that can show whether the therapy is successfully eliminating the most dangerous cancer cells.

 

The researchers explain that cells released into the bloodstream by tumors could be used to monitor cancer treatment, but they are very difficult to capture, accounting for roughly one in a billion cells. In their quest to develop technologies for capturing cancer cells from blood samples, they researchers designed devices that trapped the cells on chips made with graphene oxide, but all analysis had to be done on the chip because the cells firmly adhered. However, it was found important to study cells individually, and this new graphene device makes this possible.

The Graphene-based device captures cancer cells from a blood sample

The Graphene-based device captures cancer cells from a blood sample

The main challenge was releasing the cells without damaging them, so the team worked on design principles for creating chain-like molecules with particular capabilities, and developed a polymer that is solid at room temperature but falls apart at a temperature that can be set anywhere between about 40 and 68 degrees Fahrenheit. The polymer dissolves in water when it interacts with water molecules. At higher temperatures, heat breaks up the interactions, so the polymer doesn’t dissolve.

 

Two breast cancer The green dots show that both cells have multiple copies of the HER2 gene and have aggressive cancer.

Two breast cancer The green dots show that both cells have multiple copies of the HER2 gene and have aggressive cancer.

Team leader “Jinsang Kim” works on design principles for creating chain-like molecules with particular capabilities, and his team devised a solution. His group developed a polymer that is solid at room temperature but falls apart at a temperature that can be set anywhere between about 40 and 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
The polymer dissolves in water when it interacts with water molecules. At higher temperatures, heat breaks up the interactions, so the polymer doesn’t dissolve. Apoorv Shanker, a graduate student in macromolecular science and engineering, set the polymer to dissolve at temperatures below 54 degrees. The team mixed the tiny cell-catching graphene oxide flakes into the polymer and built the chip into a device to guide the blood sample over it.
Researchers describe that It’s very gentle for the cells, contrasting the slight dip in temperature with other designs that rely on heating or enzyme-induced chemical reactions to release the cells.

 

The device can capture and live-release up to 80 percentage of the cancer cells in the initial blood sample. Then, the clinicians could collect the cells into a tissue-like sample for conventional analysis, which can reveal the proportion of captured cancer cells that are stem cells. Alternatively, they could identify single cells for more detailed study, such as full genetic sequencing or tests that identify which drugs would be most effective.

The researchers also state that the device is easy and cost-effective to make, so large-scale clinical studies can be made possible.