This is hard to Hard to believe!
Revealed: Chinese weapon scientist has been working at the heart of Cambridge University's crucial research into new battlefield material
?Dr Junzong Feng has been a 'visiting fellow' at Cambridge working on graphene?
The material is 200 times stronger than steel but is more stretchy than rubber
Graphene, which has massive military potential, also conducts electricity
Dr Feng has been photographed in 2016 wearing a Chinese PLA army uniform
A Chinese military scientist has been conducting research with a team at Cambridge University on a revolutionary substance discovered in Britain.
Dr Junzong Feng, 38, has been working as a ?visiting fellow? with Cambridge?s NanoEngineering Group on graphene, a material two hundred times stronger than steel, more stretchy than rubber and which conducts electricity better than copper.
Experts believe it could offer a huge advantage on the battlefield. It was first extracted from graphite by a team at the University of Manchester in 2004.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-research.html
Revealed: Chinese weapon scientist has been working at the heart of Cambridge University's crucial research into new battlefield material
?Dr Junzong Feng has been a 'visiting fellow' at Cambridge working on graphene?
The material is 200 times stronger than steel but is more stretchy than rubber
Graphene, which has massive military potential, also conducts electricity
Dr Feng has been photographed in 2016 wearing a Chinese PLA army uniform
A Chinese military scientist has been conducting research with a team at Cambridge University on a revolutionary substance discovered in Britain.
Dr Junzong Feng, 38, has been working as a ?visiting fellow? with Cambridge?s NanoEngineering Group on graphene, a material two hundred times stronger than steel, more stretchy than rubber and which conducts electricity better than copper.
Experts believe it could offer a huge advantage on the battlefield. It was first extracted from graphite by a team at the University of Manchester in 2004.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-research.html

Comment