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Tech

Durham's Graphene Composites teams up with US firm on Covid-19 tech project

The alliance will see the NETPark innovator work with G Form, based in New England

Sandy Chen, CEO of Graphene Composites(Image: Graphene Composites)

A County Durham tech firm has teamed up with an American sportswear company to make new products which they say can capture and kill Coronavirus.

Sedgefield-based Graphene Composites (GC) works with graphene – the strongest known material in the world – and combines it with other materials to make products like bullet-proof shields.

More recently the company, based at the Centre for Process Innovation at NETPark, has been working on a graphene ink that can be applied to fabrics including face masks and other personal protective equipment (PPE).

Rather than trapping or filtering bacteria and viruses, the graphene ink-treated PPE should kill them, providing significantly increased protection against coronavirus.

In March, the firm’s CEO Sandy Chen issued a call out to firms around the world to work with Graphene Composites and develop products that could be used in the battle against Covid-19.

Now the firm has announced it has created an alliance with G-Form, an athletic protective gear maker based in New England, to develop and distribute cutting-edge new products that catch and kill Coronavirus

Using Graphene Composites breakthrough technology, the Rhode Island firm – which makes sportsgear like knee and elbow guards for athletes – will produce medical protective equipment and athletic apparel, pre-treated with a silver nanoparticle/graphene oxide ink application that captures and kills Coronavirus droplets that spread from an infected person.

G-Form pivoted its manufacturing plant two months ago to the production of PPE face shields and has already produced more than one million units.