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Graphene reveals electrons that behave like frictionless fluid and break textbook rules

Cracking graphene's quantum code
Top Left: 3D atomistic model of the graphene device. Bottom Left: Top view of the actual device, as seen under an optical microscope. Right: Artistic Illustration of electrons moving like a fluid inside graphene. Credit: Aniket Majumdar

For several decades, a central puzzle in quantum physics has remained unsolved: Could electrons behave like a perfect, frictionless fluid with electrical properties described by a universal quantum number?

This unique property of electrons has been extremely difficult to detect in any material so far because of the presence of atomic defects, impurities, and imperfections in the material.

Researchers at the Department of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics, Indian Institute of Science (IISc), along with collaborators from the National Institute for Materials Science, Japan, have now finally detected this quantum fluid of electrons in graphene—a material consisting of a single sheet of pure carbon atoms.

The results, published in , open a new window into the quantum realm and establish graphene as a unique tabletop laboratory for exploring hitherto unseen quantum phenomena.

"It is amazing that there is so much to do on just a single layer of graphene even after 20 years of discovery," says Arindam Ghosh, Professor at the Department of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics, IISc, and one of the corresponding authors of the study.

The team engineered exceptionally clean samples of graphene and tracked how these materials conduct electricity and heat simultaneously. To their surprise, they discovered an inverse relationship between the two properties: as one value (electrical conductivity) increased, the other (thermal conductivity) decreased, and vice versa.

This remarkable phenomenon arises from the dramatic violation of a textbook principle for metals, the Wiedemann-Franz law, which dictates that the values of electrical and thermal conductivity should be directly proportional.

Cracking graphene's quantum code
The team at IISc leading the work. Left to right: Akash Gugnani, Aniket Majumdar, Pritam Pal, Arindam Ghosh. Credit: Aniket Majumdar

In their graphene samples, the IISc team observed a strong deviation from this law by a factor of more than 200 at low temperatures, demonstrating the decoupling of charge and heat conduction mechanisms.

This decoupling, however, is not a random event—it turns out that both charge and heat conduction in this case rely on a material-independent universal constant which is equal to the quantum of conductance, a fundamental value related to the movement of electrons.

This exotic behavior emerges at the "Dirac point," a precise electronic tipping point—achieved by tweaking the number of electrons in the material—where graphene is neither a metal nor an insulator. In this state, electrons cease to act as individual particles and instead move together the way a liquid does, just like water but a hundred times less viscous.

"Since this water-like behavior is found near the Dirac point, it is called a Dirac fluid—an exotic state of matter which mimics the , a soup of highly energetic subatomic particles observed in at CERN," says Aniket Majumdar, first author and Ph.D. student at the Department of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics.

The team additionally measured the viscosity of this Dirac fluid and found it to be minimally viscous, the closest possible to a perfect fluid.

The findings establish graphene as an ideal low-cost platform for investigating concepts from high-energy physics and astrophysics, such as black-hole thermodynamics and entanglement entropy scaling, in a laboratory setting.

From a technological perspective, the presence of Dirac fluid in also holds significant potential for use in quantum sensors capable of amplifying very weak electrical signals and detecting extremely weak magnetic fields.

More information: Aniket Majumdar et al, Universality in quantum critical flow of charge and heat in ultraclean graphene, Nature Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics (2025).

Quantized limit of conductivity in near-ideal graphene, Nature Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics (2025).

Journal information: Nature Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics

Citation: Graphene reveals electrons that behave like frictionless fluid and break textbook rules (2025, September 1) retrieved 1 September 2025 from /news/2025-09-graphene-reveals-electrons-frictionless-fluid.html
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